![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() When I first started reading, I wasn’t really sure I was going to enjoy the book. The book is quite dark overall, which makes sense the very nature of the book means that Harper is pretty much always thinking about death, how people died, and whether or not she’s about to be killed herself. I don’t normally like mysteries, and I wouldn’t really call this one of my favorite books, but it held its own as a short, enjoyable read for an afternoon or two. While this was absolutely nothing like the Sookie Stackhouse series, I still enjoyed it a surprising amount for a mystery. ![]() When she and her stepbrother travel to a small town in the Ozarks to try and find the body of a local teenager, they realise that there’s a whole lot more than a suicide going on – and no one wants Harper to figure out the truth. It’s more than a little stressful, but Harper uses her unusual talent to help people figure out the causes of their loved ones’ deaths, for a fee. She can sense bodies, causes of death, and sometimes even flashes back into that person’s life to witness their death from their perspective. When she was young, Harper Connolly was struck with a bolt of lightning, and ever since then has had something of a connection with dead people. ![]()
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