American Girl is the eighth novel by American author, Wendy Walker. Not until she was eleven did Charlie Hudson find out she was autistic. Six years on, she’s in her final year of high school, has a place at MIT studying data analytics, is aiming to win the town scholarship, and working at Sawyer’s Triple S sandwich bar to save up her college fees.
She employs a number of strategies to cope with the aspects of her autism that unnerve those around her, including her extensive list of life rules that help her understand human behaviour. And she’s going to need them all: her boss, Clay Cooper, the town’s wealthiest, most influential and also nastiest businessman, has been murdered, and the police believe that Charlie knows who did it.
But Charlie’s not talking. The people she considers her real family, much moreso than her step-father, step-brothers, and often her mother, are those whom she works with at the Triple S: her manager Nora, her best friend, Keller, and hard-working Janice. And it turns out each of them, as well as Keller’s older boyfriend, Levi, has a motive for killing Coop so, no, she has no intention of betraying her friends: Charlie’s not saying a word.
But then an FBI agent turns up, telling Charlie that there might be a dangerous thug on her trail, believing she knows the whereabouts of some laundered cash and a certain cell phone. Much as she’d rather not expose herself to the stirring feelings that his proximity raises, she has to ask her ex-boyfriend, Ian Maguire, now a rookie cop, for help.
Walker gives the reader a cleverly plotted tale, with several excellent twists and turns that keep the reader guessing right up to the final reveals. Charlie is a gutsy, resourceful protagonist in whom the reader will easily invest and enthusiastically cheer on. She is observant of details and her rules for life show insight beyond her years. Utterly gripping crime fiction.
This unbiased review is from an uncorrected proof copy provided by NetGalley and Blackstone Publishing