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Columbia River #1

La sorella scomparsa

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Fino a dove sei disposto ad arrivare pur di sfuggire al passato?

Sono passati vent’anni ma Emily non riesce a cancellare l’immagine del padre impiccato nel giardino di casa, prima che tutto prendesse fuoco. All’epoca aveva raccontato alla polizia che in quel momento stava dormendo, come la sorella minore, Madison. La maggiore, Tara, invece si trovava da un’amica. Le conseguenze di quella tragedia furono inimmaginabili: pochi giorni dopo la madre si era suicidata e Tara aveva lasciato per sempre quel che rimaneva della famiglia e il paese in cui era nata. Da allora Emily e Madison cercano di sopravvivere, finché un duplice omicidio le riporta bruscamente nel passato.

L’agente dell’FBI Zander Wells è impaziente di risolvere quel caso brutale, ma è altrettanto incuriosito dal mistero che si nasconde nel passato di Emily e delle sorelle. Quando poi viene versato altro sangue, inizia a sospettare che il paese nasconda un segreto che nessuno vorrebbe dissotterrare. È qualcosa di cui Emily e Madison sono a conoscenza? E Tara? Che fine ha fatto la sorella maggiore?

347 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 14, 2020

40724 people are currently reading
35386 people want to read

About the author

Kendra Elliot

39 books6,359 followers
An Amazon #1 selling author, Kendra Elliot has sold over 14 Million books and been on the WSJ best seller more than a dozen times.

She grew up in the lush Pacific Northwest and still lives, but spends most of the time in the high desert in flip flops.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 2,611 reviews
Profile Image for Maureen Carden.
292 reviews70 followers
March 7, 2020
The Last Sister by Kendra Elliot succeeds on several levels. First off if gives us an updated look at Ava and Mason even though they still aren’t married. Will summer never come? Then there is the delight in knowing this is the beginning of a new Elliot series, so don’t worry if you haven’t read previous books of the FBI agents. Finally, this is a first rate mystery involving brutal murders, hate crimes, some zany characters and a missing sister.
I am saving--at least for prior readers of the Ava Callahan and Mason McLane series--the best for last. This is Zander Well’s story; and what a story it is. Since this is the beginning of a new series, it does not matter is you have read the Callahan and McLane series.
It starts with the hanging of a black man and the stabbing murder of his white wife. The woman who discovers the bodies, Emily Mills, also discovered the body of her father hanging from a tree twenty years earlier. Even though there seems to be no connection, Zander finds himself intrigued with both the earlier crime and the resulting tragedies.
Emily lives in genteel poverty in a shabby mansion with her sister, Madison, and three zany aunts who are town forces to be reckoned with. Emily and Madison live with giant holes with their parents both dead and their older sister, Tara, missing since their parents' deaths.

Emily can not understand why and how these new tragedies connect with her own even though she is keeping secrets, both old and new that might provide insight if exposed to the light of day. However, Emily works with Zander and Ava to discover why history seems to be repeating itself.
The Last Sister contains no red herrings, jaw-dropping events or twists just for the heck of it. This is a straight ahead police procedural and mystery with some surprises, none of which come from left field. They totally make sense and are part of a natural flow. Can you tell I’m not a fan of the big -reveal- just- for –the- heck- of -it books?
As usual, Elliot does a terrific job in describing the setting; this time near where the Columbia River empties into the Pacific. I always have the same reaction to her varied Oregon series: I-want-to-go-there.
Elliot’s characters always seem so natural to me. People I could be living next door to. People who could be populating any small fading town; except of course for the vicious murders.
This is a terrific start to a new series.
Thank you to NetGalley for an ARC in exchange for a fair and honest review.
Profile Image for Monica (is working the heck out of  .
232 reviews79 followers
August 7, 2020
Kendra Elliot’s The Last Sister is another unfortunate example of an intriguing, promising but poorly executed idea.

Huge sections of the writing seem awkward and unpolished, as if the manuscript could have done with at least two more rounds of editing .

The differences between the polished and unpolished aspects of the book gave me the impression that it may have been a collaborative effort.

The rough sections are really rough. The author improperly employs the possessive so that characters appear to be related. Emily (Mills) and Ava McClain are neither sisters nor spouses. Nate (Copelin) and Sean Fitch are neither blood related nor married. Their names are related by way of victimhood. Omitting surnames and employing the possessive in this way is one of those basic errors you wouldn’t expect in a published work.

Dialogue exchanges, stiff and unnatural to begin with, meander off into weird tangents.

Also, the book has a humorous quality I neither expected nor appreciated; the blurb gave me the impression that I was getting a serious crime thriller.

At several points I thought I was reading/listening to a spoof.

Zander Wells has some ditzy moments that sent me rolling on the floor. In an attempt to puzzle out an inconsistency, he says, “You told me Tara was there, but Tara told the police that she wasn’t.” Even *I*, with my zero years of law enforcement experience, would have made the logical leap to “Hey, maybe Tara was lying to the cops!”

To continue, He’s almost certain that a suspect is armed because he is a suspect in a shooting? Seriously? I have no solid proof that you’ve shot someone to death. I can’t be certain that you even own a firearm. So, the logical conclusion here is that you *must* be armed? Seriously? LOL!

And I’m sure there must be *some* FBI agents who care how their interrogation subjects “feel” about their tone and approach, but I’ve never read of any, not in serious crime thrillers.

I had to suspend my disbelief at times. For an FBI agent investigating a brutal murder in which anyone could be a suspect, Zander is awfully chummy with the townsfolk.

He can waltz into the kitchen of the diner and make requests of the chef. He is on a first name basis with the Barton sisters almost immediately and having tea with them the day of the murder.

Worse still, he allows a civilian to accompany him in the field because attraction, one he met two days ago.
Wasn’t he just interrogating said civilian about a 20-minute time gap he uncovered when reviewing her statement?

For all he knew, she could have been in on the murder and leading him into a trap.

Other eyebrow raisers include Madison’s decision that her aunt is mistaken about seeing her older sister. Why? She doesn’t have the long blonde hair she had 20 years ago. Was it really so inconceivable that her sister may have changed her hair in the last two decades?

Finally, I’m not especially fond of the “lying by omission to protect you from things that involve you” plot device, and its overuse in this novel is especially problematic.

There is a big difference between harboring a life and family shattering secret (I don’t really like this either but I understand, to an extent, why this is done) and deciding what people get to know about potential threats to their safety. People have been slashing tires and leaving dead animals on the porch. Everyone knows it but elects to keep quiet so as not to worry the others. I’m not here for infantilizing adults because ageism/perceived fragility, and the “don’t worry the aunts/girls about urgent matters” thing was irritating.

TL/DR: this one had enormous potential and some great moments but it’s not one I’d recommend.
Profile Image for Darren.
184 reviews84 followers
February 25, 2025
It started off well and I was intrigued to see how it ended. The plot was okay and I liked the characters

Unfortunately the writing didn't work for me and some of the conversations were clunky at best. The ending was pretty anticlimactic and I really didn't buy into the "romantic" element of the story

An easy summer read but not sure I'd read anything by the author again
Profile Image for chantalsbookstuff.
1,048 reviews1,054 followers
June 20, 2023
An interesting first instalment featuring a hate crime and a much deeper plot with horrific consequences. The story maintained a smooth flow, especially considering it was the first book, and the characters were exceptionally well-developed. The Last Sister showed promise and left me intrigued to see what lies ahead.
Profile Image for Berit☀️✨ .
2,095 reviews15.7k followers
January 23, 2020
This was such a compelling crime thriller. This is the first book in Kendra Elliot’s new Columbia River series. Mystery, history, romance, sisters, small town, racism, Family secrets, zany aunts. Emily is shook to the core when she finds her friend’s dead body stabbed multiple times and her husband dead as well hung from a tree. The first thought is that this is a murder suicide, but Emily is not convinced. This is too similar to a prior murder in this small town years ago when Emily‘s father had been killed by hanging. Her father‘s murder also led to her mother’s suicide and her older sister’s disappearance. This brutal murder brings in the FBI and agent Zander Wells. What follows is a fast paced cleverly plotted investigation into the murders both in the present and the past. The investigation also brings together Zander and Emily.

This book was much more Mystery than romance in fact I’d be hesitant to call it romantic suspense. There is an obvious attraction between Zander and Emily although it is not acted on, much. I had no problem with this because I was completely invested in this mystery. I love the big old house that Emily and her sister Madison lived in with there great aunts. I was intrigued by the past. Why was their father killed? And where was their sister? I also was extremely fascinated by the history of Oregon, I truly had no idea Oregon had such a dark history. I loved playing detective and trying to puzzle this together with Zander and Emily. And even though there was very little romance in the story I am really hoping that there will be a little more in the next book and it will continue the story of Zander and Emily, I really like these two together.

This book in emojis. 🔪 🩸 🌲 🌊

*** Big thank you to Amazon Pub for my gifted copy of this book. All opinions are my own. ***

For more of my reviews and bookish thoughts please visit my blog Or follow me on Bookstagram>
Profile Image for Carrie.
3,567 reviews1,693 followers
January 28, 2020
The Last Sister by Kendra Elliot is the first book in the new romantic suspense Columbia River series. However, while this is the first book of this series this seems to be a sort of spin off from another of Kendra Elliot’s series with a few characters having been seen before but one does not need to have read the previous series to enjoy this one.

FBI special agent Zander Wells has been called to a remote Oregon logging town when a somewhat unique murder occurs with the body found hanging. However, this style of murder is not a first in this little town and it just happens the person finding the body was all too familiar with this type of death.

Twenty years before Emily Mills found her father after her was murdered and his body was left hanging in the backyard. Back then the killer was finally caught and Emily and her two sisters, Madison and Tara have tried to forget. Being caught up right in the middle of this new investigation has Emily and Zander stirring up secrets that have been buried.

I’ve read several of Kendra Elliot’s romantic suspense books but have sadly not gotten caught up on all of them just yet but I did know from what I have read that she is definitely a solid romantic suspense writer so I went in fully expecting to like this book, which I did. I do wish I had gotten to the Callahan and McLane series this one seems to spin off of though as one thing holding me back here was there were a lot of characters floating around to get to know and perhaps the ones making a previous appearance would have been easier to follow instead of being totally new too. Still a great start to this new series though that new readers and fans will enjoy.

I received an advance copy from the publisher via NetGalley.

For more reviews please visit https://carriesbookreviews.com/
Profile Image for PamG.
1,296 reviews1,035 followers
November 26, 2020
THE LAST SISTER by Kendra Elliot brings mystery and suspense to a police procedural and romantic suspense novel set in Bartonville, Oregon. This is the first book in the Columbia River series but brings in characters from other series as well. It’s the first book that I have read by this author.

Emily Mills’ father was murdered twenty years ago and she found his body hanging from a tree in the backyard. Since then, she has tried to forget everything about that night. However, when a similar murder occurs in contemporary times, and Emily finds another body, her life is about to change. Questions abound. Are the deaths related? If so, how and why?

Our protagonists, FBI Special Agent Zander Wells and Emily Mills, bring an interesting dynamic to this novel. Despite Emily being a witness, there is an attraction between them. How will it affect the case? Emily is resilient, but she wants to protect her family, and she has secrets to keep too. Zander is a dedicated FBI agent and has a heartbreaking backstory. Great characters tend to develop from the ups and downs of life, and Zander and Emily emerge as believable characters with some shortcomings, just like real people. The secondary characters had a range of depths, but all enhanced the story without overwhelming it.

The plot was suspenseful and very complex. There were a multitude of conflicts that kept me engaged in the story line. The author did a great job of letting this reader see Emily’s inner conflicts, motivations and personality. There were plenty of plot twists and turns, and a few surprises along the way. A consistent pace from scene to scene - until the action-packed ending, where the subplots tied together - had me quickly turning the pages. The romantic part of this novel took a backseat and did not detract from the story line. This is not an instant-love type of romantic suspense, but a slow building of respect and attraction. The author did a great job of world-building. The descriptions were vivid and gave a clear sense of place. It felt like I was on the Oregon coast experiencing the vagaries of the weather and small town attitudes.

Overall, this was a compelling crime thriller that tackled some very serious themes ranging from murder, secrets and family relationships to racism, drugs and much more. This is the first book I have read by Kendra Elliott, but I am happy to say that I own five others and can’t wait to read them. If you enjoy crime novels and police procedurals set in a small town with a small amount of romance, then I recommend that you check out this series.

I purchased a digital copy of this novel. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own and are not biased in any way. Publication date was January 14, 2020. This review was originally posted at Mystery and Suspense Magazine.
Profile Image for Jennifer ~ TarHeelReader.
2,785 reviews31.9k followers
February 16, 2020
The Last Sister is the first installment in an exciting new crime thriller series from Kendra Elliot!

Emily Mills’s father was murdered more than twenty years ago. She found his body. Emily’s mother never recovered from her despair and committed suicide. One of her sisters left town. Gratefully, the murder was captured and imprisoned, but that was never the end of it for this family.

Then, a similar murder happens, and an FBI agent comes to town to investigate. He seems just as interested in their father’s murder as he is in the one he’s there to solve.

I found the storyline intriguing from the start. The tension of what happened to Emily’s father just never let go, even when it was solved. The setting on the Oregon coast in a logging town is super atmospheric. The plots and chapters move quickly, and it was a race to the finish to see what the resolution would be.

Overall, I found The Last Sister to be a compelling and suspenseful mystery, and I’m definitely along for the ride to book two!

I received a complimentary copy.

Many of my reviews can also be found on my blog: www.jennifertarheelreader.com and instagram: www.instagram.com/tarheelreader
Profile Image for Suzanne Leopold (Suzy Approved Book Reviews).
434 reviews253 followers
February 19, 2020
The residents of a small town in Oregon are concerned when an interracial couple is found violently murdered. Sean Fitch was found hanging from a tree and his wife Lindsay was stabbed multiple times. Sean’s forehead had a Klan symbol engraved leaving folks to wonder if this was a hate crime. Both bodies were found by their friend Emily Mills.

Emily’s father was murdered in the same way twenty years ago forcing her to relive her past. Memories of his death begin to resurface but the facts are hazy since she and her sisters were young when he died. Her sisters do not discuss the topic and are emotionally closed off from one another. Emily is convinced that her father’s death is related to this murder while assisting the current investigation to uncover suspects and motives.

The Last Sister by Kendra Elliot is a suspenseful story that includes a dysfunctional family and a hint of romance. This was the first book that I read by Kendra Elliot, and I am excited for the sequel.
Profile Image for Erin.
3,903 reviews466 followers
January 18, 2020
Thanks to Netgalley and Montlake Romance for an egalley in exchange for an honest review.

FBI Agents Zander Wells and his partner, Ava McClane, find themselves in a small Orgeon town that has just witnessed a horrific murder. A couple slain in their home and the husband hung by his neck in the backyard. Is it a murder-suicide? A racially motivated crime? Or is it connected to a long ago murder? Although the local police resent their presence, the agents cannot but help feel that someone is watching their every move and isn't quite finished.

A solid suspense thriller that reeled me in the instant I began page one. Great characters, fast moving plot, but the romance between Wells and a witness was so-so. At least it didn't distract from the storyline. Not that my shelf needs it, but it looks like I probably have another series to add to the list.


Goodreads review published 18/01/20
Publication Date 14/01/20
Profile Image for Linda Strong.
3,878 reviews1,708 followers
January 18, 2020

Emily Mills' father was murdered 20 years ago. She found him hanging from the tree in their backyard. This seems to have set off a chain of events ... her mother eventually committed suicide .... her older sister disappeared and hasn't been seen or heard from since.

This night, her friends and neighbors were brutally murdered. The wife was stabbed multiple times, her husband was found hanging from a tree.

It's like deja vu all over again. Emily and her sister have tried to forget their childhood plunged in murder, and this brings it all back.

FBI Special Agent Zander Wells arrives in this small logging town along with his partner. As avid as he is to solve the brutal double slaying, he is just as intrigued with the mystery of Emily’s and her sisters’ past.

What he finds is that the sisters have secrets from everyone ...even each other. Some secrets are never meant to see the light of day. And not everyone is exactly the person they purport to be.

This is a nicely paced, highly suspenseful murder mystery that kept me riveted from the very firsst page. Throw in a little romance and all the boxes got checked for me. The main characters are credible and some of the small town residents are quirky, friendly, fun. The accent is on the suspense, light on the romance.

Many thanks to the author / Montlake Romance / Netgalley for the digital copy of this Romantic Suspense. Read and reviewed voluntarily, opinions expressed here are unbiased and entirely my own.
Profile Image for "Avonna.
1,462 reviews589 followers
February 1, 2020
Check out all of my reviews at: https://www.avonnalovesgenres.com

THE LAST SISTER (Columbia River Book #1) by Kendra Elliot is the first book in a new romantic suspense/FBI mystery series. This book is easily read as a standalone, but a few of the characters are carry overs from Ms. Elliot’s Callahan & McLane series.

Twenty years ago, a family was shattered when the father was found hanging from a tree and their home burned to the ground. The mother committed suicide a week later, the eldest daughter disappeared and that left two small girls with secrets that they would hide for years.

Present day. FBI Special Agents Zander Wells and Ava Callahan are sent to investigate a double murder in a small Oregon coastal town that is eerily similar to a twenty-year-old crime that was supposedly solved. The tip came from Emily Mills who found the slain couple and was one of the sisters who survived the old crime. Zander is determined to solve this double homicide, but he is also intrigued by the old case and Emily.

As Zander and Ava investigate, the killer threatens Emily and her relatives and then strikes again to hide his crimes past and present. Secrets long buried need to be revealed for the past and present cases to be solved before someone else is killed.

I was completely engrossed in all the plot threads in this suspense. Past and present, multigenerational secrets. I like that Ms. Elliot shows the insidious, not in-your-face racism that can infect and destroy multi-generations and towns. Zander and Emily each deserve to find happiness and I feel they were perfect for each other. There is no sex in this story and Zander and Emily are very attracted to each other, but Zander waits until the case is solved.

I highly recommend this book and I cannot wait for more book in this series. There is intriguing investigation, secrets revealed, and the start of a romance that had me turning the pages continually from beginning to “The End”.
Profile Image for Allan Nail.
160 reviews6 followers
February 23, 2020
I read a good number of crime novels each year. I can safely say this is the worst I've ever picked up.

I don't say this lightly, and the only reason I made it through to the end was a natural stubbornness and the belief that with so many positive reviews/ratings that I must be missing something. I don't think I am; I think it truly is wretched.

There was something about this novel that read like a first publication. So much of what a reader would normally infer is made explicit in italicized "thoughts" from either the paper-doll characters or the narration itself. It's dreck.

I've seen soap opera episodes with more depth, and in which more happens than this handfull of piss standing in for a crime novel. Characters don't talk like they talk in "The Last Sister," but then maybe that's what happens when nothing happens for a couple hundred pages. You speak to fill the void, to fill the pages, to do anything but think of how cliched the very name "Zander" is.

Scooby Doo mysteries are better plotted that this one. At least with Scooby Doo and the gang, there is some connection to the unmasked baddy and the mysterious situation that starts the cartoon. No clues here, no indication of the final "answer" to the mystery. Only truly unsympathetic characters brooding around a town that is apparently a couple of streets wide, falling in love with each other because why not? We have pulses, don't we? And we just know that Zander cares deeply, because a character thought it that one time. No need for any of the characters to show development through actions. That would get in the way of all the pointless glowering.

The ending of this novel is hilariously bad. A character that was virtually absent the entire novel suddenly is responsible for everything. Racist parents are given some kind of history re-write, I think, but then who can really tell. The bad guy breaks under questioning from "Zander" because I guess his unspoken indignation in the narrative at that point was just so dripping? How did this get published?

There's no one to blame but myself. I should have quit this one waaay earlier. I was looking for any excuse to avoid reading this at night that all I can think of is the last book I wanted to read before I die will likely have to go unread because I was too stubborn to put this collection of cliches and fan fiction prose back into the hell from which it came. Not recommended.
Profile Image for Liz Barnsley.
3,765 reviews1,076 followers
February 1, 2020
The Last Sister was an extraordinarily compelling novel, my first from this author but almost certainly not my last.

I love a good family drama especially within the crime genre where old secrets spill over into present day and send shockwaves through a community -just like here, where a brutal double murder sets off a chain of events for Emily and her family that will finally answer a decades old mystery.

The characters are really well rounded, the author pulls you into their world and hold you there for the entirety of the read. If you like plenty of emotionally resonant twists along the way, an intriguing puzzle and an unexpected edge to proceedings The Last Sister will definitely be for you.

I'm a fan. A complex thriller that keeps you interested and ultimately makes you want a return visit.

Thought provoking themes and engaging, intelligent characters means this comes highly recommended from me.
Profile Image for Dianne.
6,815 reviews632 followers
December 20, 2019
My Rating: 4.5 Stars!

Small town secrets can be deadly, especially if they are left to fester for twenty years and history repeats itself. A closed case may not be closed after all and a new double homicide may be linked to the dirty little secrets that hide in plain sight as racial hatred rears its ugly head, once again.

The murder of Emily’s father destroyed her family and a man was punished, but two new racially motivated murders will bring FBI agent Zander Wells to Oregon. Together, Emily and Zander will bat at a hornet’s nest and unleash a swarm of intrigue, lies and ugly secrets, but at what cost?

THE LAST SISTER by Kendra Elliot is dark, edgy and even quirky at times as we visit a small Oregon town where everybody thinks they know everybody else’s business, but do they or could they all know just enough to keep from being stung?

One family, torn apart, three sisters torn apart until one great truth is revealed that could shred the fabric of lies this town has been built on. Excellent reading, wonderfully unique characters and a twist at the end that ties everything together, even a budding romance!

I received a complimentary ARC edition from Montlake Romance! This is my honest and voluntary review.

Series: Columbia River - Book 1
Publisher: Montlake (January 14, 2020)
Publication Date: January 14, 2020
Genre: Thriller | Mystery | Romance
Print Length: 336 pages
Available from: Amazon | Barnes & Noble
For Reviews, Giveaways, Fabulous Book News, follow: http://tometender.blogspot.com
Profile Image for Amanda.
947 reviews299 followers
February 2, 2020
FBI agents Zander Wells and his partner Ava McLane are called to Oregon for a murder investigation. Sean Fitch and his wife Lindsay are both murdered and Sean’s body is discovered hanging from the tree in the garden.

Emily mills who works with Lindsay at the diner, discovers their bodies but this is not the first hanging the town has seen. Emily’s dad Lincoln Mills was also discovered hanging from a tree twenty years ago, his distraught wife killing herself a week later, leaving her daughters Maddison and Emily to be bought up by their Aunts. Tara their other sister runs away and they have never seen her since.

Are the two hangings connected? was Sean’s death a hate crime?

This is a very addictive thriller. It will keep you guessing until the end. I couldn’t read this book fast enough!!

Excited to see this is the first book in the Columbia River series and I am looking forward to the next one.

Thank you to Netgalley for my copy in exchange for a review.
Profile Image for The Humble Jess.
388 reviews29 followers
February 12, 2021
Too much is a bad thing

There's too much of everything in the book. Too much describing everything. Its like everything is detailed to the T. All noise. This was NOT fast paced. This was not a page turner. This wasn't even a thriller. Little to no drama. Nothing really interesting. Hard to keep my eyes open. I read until 50 percent of the book (ch 19). Nothing that made your heart race. Nothing to make you want to read more. The reviews are all wrong. Allll wrong. How is this a 4 star book? If you want a fast paced book look else where. This is more mystery but thats it. A mystery crime.
I am left disappointed and having to look for a different author. Or a different book.
Profile Image for Mo.
1,404 reviews2 followers
August 19, 2020
3.75 - it would be a solid 4 if we had a little bit more romance ...

This one is set along the rugged, Oregon coastline. We met Zander in the previous series by Ms Eliott (which I did read and enjoy) but I'll be damned if I can remember him... I think he only had a small, secondary role in them ... that's my excuse and I'm sticking to it!!


A horrible crime is committed and it bears a resemblance to one that took place in the area over twenty years ago so the FBI are called in.

Ava and Zander looked at each other, each easily reading the other's thoughts. Neither of them believed in coincidences.



Not much romance if that is what you are looking for. Maybe the next one will progress in that direction. I just checked and the next book goes back to the characters in the Callahan and McLane series, Mason and Ava (who I did like - they make an appearance in this book too (why do authors keep confusing us (me)!)


The only negative thing I would say about the book (only one, Mo - wow, that's not like you) is that it all sort of finished up a bit too easily ... it all fell into place a bit too quickly!


She felt as bleak as the coastal weather ...






Profile Image for Vanessa Menezes.
549 reviews169 followers
June 17, 2020
This is my first Kendra Elliot book and it definitely wont be my last!!

Although this is the first book in the new Columbia River series, I figured that some of the characters might be spin offs from other series, but that didn't affect my reading in any way.

Twenty years ago Emily Mills’s father was murdered, and she found his body hanging in the backyard. Her younger sister, Madison, claims she was asleep in her room. Her older sister, Tara, claims she was out with friends. The tragedy drove their mother to suicide and Tara to leave town forever.

The killer was caught and the case was closed but it destroyed the family of Mills sisters forever.

But now twenty years later, when Emily finds her friend Lindsay and her husband Sean murdered in a similar fashion, it brings back memories that she never wants to remember.

FBI Agents Zander Wells and his partner, Ava McClane are called to investigate this double homicide. But then the question arises-Is it a murder-suicide as determined by the local sheriff? A racially motivated crime? Or is it connected to a Emily Mills father's murder?

It was a great suspense thriller that had me hooked on right till the end. I liked how this book was about past meets present type, wherein deeply buried family secrets are finally revealed and solved.

All the characters were amazing and it made an enjoyable read. I'm looking forward to read the next book in the series!
Profile Image for Sophia.
Author 5 books399 followers
January 14, 2020
A gritty death with ties to a dark past, a family keeping secrets, and a small Oregon coastal town ready to boil over when a pair of FBI agents rush to get to the bottom of things. Tension is high and the path to the truth has to twist and turn its way to the end before all is said and done. I wouldn't have it any other way when it comes to a Kendra Elliot book. This one lived up to expectation and I'm thirsty for more.

The Last Sister is a standalone story in a new series. It does spin off an older series, Callahan & McLane, with Ava McLane as one of the FBI agents in this story and trading places with her partner, Zander Wells, who gets his story now.

Emily Mills' employee at the diner is a no-show. When she goes in search of her waitress, she is confronted by a double killing that is reminiscent of her dad's murder in the past. She believes the local sheriff is in over his head and calls the FBI not realizing just what she has woken up in her own past. She lost so much the night her father was murdered. Her mother, unstable at the best of times, took her own life, and her older sister Tara ran off and never came back. Her younger sister Madison shut down and goes about in a state of detachment. Emily never told a soul what she saw the night her dad was killed and the house set on fire- Tara hadn't been at a friends. She had been there- in the woods behind the house that night. And, now its happening all over again- the hanging murder, the hate crime affiliation, and even the attempt to burn the Fitch's home. She has to place her trust in cool-eyed and capable Zander Wells and his partner Ava to get to the bottom even if her sordid family history and secrets may come out after all this time.

Zander shows up in a small coastal town and finds a gruesome murder and the trail leads through some of Oregon's darkest history with the Klan, White Supremists, and their legacy. He knows the Mills sisters and their Barton family are at the center of it all some how even though a seemingly unrelated couple are the newest victims. Ava says he's getting too involved with his witness especially since she isn't telling them all the truth. He tries to keep it professional, but there is something about Emily Mills who calmly spotted murder and knew her way around a murder scene and who took up the reins to hold her family together in the face of tragedy that got to him. He will find the truth and keep Emily- her sister and aunts- from becoming more victims.

I remember being how wowed I was when I picked up the author's Mercy Kilpatrick series and learned about preppers and sovereign citizens for the first time. This time it was how White Supremacist groups had shaped the area as well as a little with the logging industry. She peels back more dark Oregon history once again in an insulated community on the coast. Her setting, situation, and characters are colorful and alive. Her suspense plot is immediate and palpable so that the reader is sucked in and kept close through the whole pulse-pounding story.

The focus is most definitely on the case, but there was no neglect of character and back story development. I got to know both Zander and Emily well. I could enjoy their subtle attraction and the beginnings of their romance. The author didn't try to do too much with that by pushing it faster or harder than the situation warranted. There is a crime to solve and people are getting hurt so it worked best to focus on that, which she did. Zander comes with some baggage that is sad so Emily is not the only one who has quirks that come with her. I know it is just a small thing, but I liked that they found that level of understanding and empathy from each other. In the background were Emily's equally quirky family who were bright spots in the story and her sister Madison even shared part of the narration with Emily and Zander.

As to the murder mystery, I was tracking along and assembling my clues- even getting a lot of it right- but the actual culprit? Not in a million years! And, that last big climax scene kept me riveted with all my senses engaged. Big money scene paid triple!

All in all, this was exactly my kind of romantic suspense even touching the history buff inside me while handling police procedure, forensic, and character development just right. I can't recommend this author enough for those who enjoy a good romantic suspense, emphasis on the suspense.

I rec'd this book through Net Galley to read in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for İlkim.
1,469 reviews11 followers
November 28, 2019
I received a copy of this book via Netgalley.com in exchange for an honest review.

Lately Kendra Elliot became one of my favorite authors. This book was listed fifth book in the Callahan & McLane series in Netgalley; so I didn't want to start from the last one, I read previous four books before. And I realized this one could be read by alone, you don't need the know about Callahan & McLane books. Our main character is FBI agent Zander Wells and he is partner of Ava McLane. They are investigating a possible race murder, possible connections to KKK. Our heroine is Emily Mills, and her father hanged twenty years before - just like the murder in this story's beginning. All connections, all mysteries are being solved and the killer shows himself.

I liked the story. I think I get to know this author writing a lot, and it never bores me. I'll definitely wait for this series' next books. And of course I'm waiting for the new Ava and Mason book.
Profile Image for ♥Rachel♥.
2,270 reviews923 followers
March 4, 2020
Great start to the series! I'm looking forward to more Xander and Emily, and the rest of the Mills/Barton clan!

Enjoyed Cassandra Campbell's performance and Mikael Naramore's as well, but his female voices not so much. Dear audio book producers: please have your female performer do all the female voices and your male performer do all the male voices! This has been an ongoing gripe for a few years now. Have no idea why this doesn't happen for the most part.
Profile Image for Melany.
1,290 reviews153 followers
August 11, 2023
Wow, this truly had me hooked from the start! Loved the 2 main characters plus their energy together. The whole family aspect and all of the aunts were amazing too! Shocked by the multiple twists that happened near the ending. It kept throwing me off amd gripping me to read more! I had to read this in one sitting!

Found this book on Prime Reading.
Profile Image for Zoe.
2,366 reviews332 followers
January 31, 2020
Riveting, edgy, and suspenseful!

In this compelling first instalment in the Columbia River series, The Last Sister, Elliot has written a tortuous whodunit where cases from the present and the past intertwine, suspects are in abundance, and deep-rooted racism runs rampant.

The writing is taut and intense. The characters are vulnerable, persistent, and driven. And the plot is an ominous tale full of twists, turns, red herrings, family drama, deception, corruption, hatred, murder, and a smidgen of romance.

Overall, I would have to say that The Last Sister, is an intricately woven, provocative, highly entertaining mystery that’s a promising start for this new series with its nice pace, well-developed characters, and action-packed plot.

Thank you to Thomas Allen & Son for providing me with a copy in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Rich.
297 reviews28 followers
March 23, 2020
This book was better than my last one but not by much lol. It squeaks in at 3.0 on the dot. This story moved at a good pace and was easy to read. It was the first time that I have read a book from this author and she has some talent. My problems with the book were several one being first the cheesy romance angle to it-it was not needed and watered down the rest of the book. The main characters were ok but some of the secondary characters were not needed. There was too much added fluff or padding with unneeded secondary stories that did not add to the main story. The ending was sort of meah and why what happened happened was kind of weak so was the bad guy. I think she has the chance to be a better thriller writer with a better editor and cut out the cheesy romance parts. I would not run out in a rush to buy this book but if you need to read something then maybe give it a spin.
Profile Image for ☕️Kimberly  (Caffeinated Reviewer).
3,587 reviews785 followers
January 17, 2020
From the violent crime scene we stumble upon in the opening scene with Emily Mills, we know something sinister has happened in this small Oregon town where everyone knows everyone. For Emily the scene in the backyard is all too familiar and when the local sheriff talks murder-suicide, Emily puts a call into the FBI.

FBI Zander Wells and his partner Ava McLane arrive on the scene hours later. The crime scene is a mess, but the young woman who called was right, this appears to be a hate crime and it’s only the beginning.

I really enjoy Elliot’s crime thrillers and The Last Sister weaved in history, racism, and hate groups into a suspenseful tale that not only included the current murders, but weaved in those from the past.

The story was light on procedural jargon, but we’re provided just enough through autopsies, and details to feel a part of the investigation.

The Mills family, Emily, her sisters along with their eccentric Aunts added to the tale. Emily has been keeping a secret and their oldest sister left town never-to-be-heard from but the past is about to reawaken.

Elliot delivered a side-romance and I look forward to seeing how it develops over the course of the series. The author’s stories focus on the case but also give us a feel for the main characters and their lives. Allowing the reader to care and connect with the. I appreciated that connection. This review was originally posted at Caffeinated Reviewer
Profile Image for Suzanne Leopold (Suzy Approved Book Reviews).
434 reviews253 followers
February 19, 2020
The residents of a small town in Oregon are concerned when an interracial couple is found violently murdered. Sean Fitch was found hanging from a tree and his wife Lindsay was stabbed multiple times. Sean’s forehead had a Klan symbol engraved leaving folks to wonder if this was a hate crime. Both bodies were found by their friend Emily Mills.

Emily’s father was murdered in the same way twenty years ago forcing her to relive her past. Memories of his death begin to resurface but the facts are hazy since she and her sisters were young when he died. Her sisters do not discuss the topic and are emotionally closed off from one another. Emily is convinced that her father’s death is related to this murder while assisting the current investigation to uncover suspects and motives.

The Last Sister by Kendra Elliot is a suspenseful story that includes a dysfunctional family and a hint of romance. This was the first book that I read by Kendra Elliot, and I am excited for the sequel.
Profile Image for Miki’s⚠️ Safety Reviews & Rants⚠️.
736 reviews942 followers
March 15, 2025
This one was bad.
Poor Zander he deserved a better less freaking messed up story.

Emily- why does he past have to be so pathetic and miserable. Of course her ex husband couldn’t just be a normal love and marriage that went bad. No her husband w first w her older sister 🤮…. Then Emily then he wanted her younger sister. Gross. But also why could she have just had a normal relationship.

Zander lost his wife and unborn child to cancer and he loved them still and he had a beautiful love w her.

Why is t that the hero always has love and the h is alway living a horrid life before the H? I have this but I didn’t expect to get it in this type of book.

Add to that the traumatic family history of the h and this girl has the worst life.

Anyways besides that the story bored me. It was just plain weird.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Ian.
1,431 reviews183 followers
November 25, 2023
If I'm totally honest this is a good book that could have been great with better narrators. It's not a criticism of the skills of the narrators, I'm sure they would be right for other books but I don't think they are right for this book.
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