The protagonist, Faye, is a drop-out from a university level archaeological program. She almost makes a poverty level living with "pot hunting" while she tries to restore a decrepit family home that's pretty remote. That's the opener. She is intelligent, pretty, petite, multi-racial, strong-willed, athletic. And she has a few faults, too. (Yeah, I was all teary-eyed before I'd even finished the first chapter. She is just such a sympathetic person.) She knows full well the ethical ambiguities and illegality of what she's doing there, in secret, on some low sandy islands along the coast of the Florida panhandle. She even tries to be meticulous with cataloging her finds.
Meanwhile, Faye has obtained a short-term job as an archaeological field supervisor under a former professor. At her secret location on a nearby sand bar, she uncovers an old murder scene and an earring. And then two of the kids on the university dig get murdered out of the blue. Thing go quickly haywire with a lot of complications, and the suspense builds relentlessly to a stormy climax.
This is a wonderful book: way deeper than your ordinary genre novel. The author may not have set out to write the Great American Novel, but I kind of think she has nailed it. It says a lot about history, slavery, America, politics, race, archaeology, ethics, and morality. A couple of times the author even takes the reader aside to give important history lessons that contextualize what's happening.
I obtained this for free during an Amazon promotion, but after reading it I would certainly have paid full price. I'll probably move along to buy the next book in the series and find out what happens to Faye.