Once again, I will note I happen to know the writers brother, so I’m
still going to give my best review.
"Ten year-old Erin is missing; taken in broad daylight
during a friend's birthday party. With no witnesses and no leads, DI Lukas
Mahler races against time to find her. But is it already too late for Erin -
and will her abductor stop at one stolen child? And the discovery of human
remains on a construction site near Inverness confronts Mahler's team with a
cold case from the 1940s. Was Aeneas Grant's murder linked to a nearby POW
camp, or is there an even darker story to be uncovered? With his team stretched
to the limit, Mahler's hunt for Erin's abductor takes him from Inverness to the
Lake District. And decades-old family secrets link both cases in a shocking
final twist."
What Lies Buried is the second Lukas Mahler story and is a gripping tale about an ugly, but
very realistic subject of child abduction. There is also an additional sub-plots
dealing with a 70 year-old murder and Mahler’s ongoing association with local
crime boss Carl “Cazza” Mackay that gets a new wrinkle when it looks like
someone is trying kill MacKay.
It’s a fast-paced story, and Kirk easily keeps all the threads of tale
from unraveling –though I could do less with the Andy Black and his
questionable tactics with his police work and his silly rivalry with Mahler. While I understand the male ego, it’s very
clear Andy’s moral compass is compromised and it irritates me that no one else
see’s this. Maybe this is what cops do; ignore some of the other cops obvious
flaws just because there is this “brotherhood” among them. And as clever as June
Wallace, Mahler’s boss, I’m surprised how much she lets Black get away with.
Sometimes I felt it made her a bit of a dim bulb. Also, I felt the whole issue
with the Chief –Wallace’s boss- was too much Eastenders, to borrow a British
soap opera title. Look, I understand that everyone wants things to be resolved
nice and neat, and the press will hound police, but it all seems too
predictable soap opera tropes.
This book also sets up the third yet-to-be-released third Lukas Mahler
story, ending on a cliffhanger. This may explain why some story points are not
resolved (unless I missed it), like why one of the girls who goes missing is later
found dead. Why she died is never fully explained (though it’s later revealed
that the girl’s disappearance is connected to events sometime prior), and there
was no trauma on the girls body, so why was she murdered?
I liked the book, though and will look forward towards book three. But
I do hope that Kirk winds down some of sub-plots (like who’s trying to destroy
Cazza MacKay), as they do sometimes distract from the main plot.
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