Book Review – My Sister’s Grave, by Robert Dugoni

My Sister’s Grave by Robert Dugoni

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


My Sister’s Grave is the first entry in a series featuring Tracy Crosswhite, a Seattle homicide detective. Tracy is haunted by the death of her sister Sarah twenty years ago, for which Edmund House, a known rapist, was tried and convicted. Problem is, Tracy doesn’t think that House did it – there were enough irregularities at his trial so she suspects he was framed because the cops in Cedar Grove, her hometown, couldn’t find the real killer. So Tracy teams up with an old flame to try to get House a new trial, which she hopes will reopen the investigation into Sarah’s murder.
For the most part, this is a good read. The characters are well-developed and interesting, which makes up for a dearth of action in the first half of the book. More suspense builds up in the second half, but the suspect pool for Sarah’s murder is thin, which makes it easy to finger the perp. Once the murderer is exposed, the book drones on, tying up loose ends, for much longer than it should. All this accounts for the loss of a star.



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