Thank you, Partner
@bibliolifestyle @harperperennial for the review copy of Death Under a Little
Sky by Stig Abell.
What is the weather like where
you live? The winter in Northeast
Wisconsin has been unseasonably mild, but this past week it took a full turn
into winter with a blizzard on Friday into Saturday. Even living in town, it makes you have a
sense of isolation when the cold winds are screaming around your house.
Death Under a Little Sky
is a story with a sense of isolation.
Jake Jackson has heard from his eccentric uncle on and off through the years. He finds out that his uncle has died and has
left him an isolated property in the country with enough money to keep it up
and to keep him fed. He has had a
private detective follow Jake and he knows that Jake’s marriage is in shambles
after many miscarriages. Jake is a 38-year-old
detective in London who specializes in cold cases. He decides to take the life that his uncle
has offered him. He quits his job,
separates from his wife, and moves to his uncle’s property, Little Sky.
Jake enjoys living off
the grid with no phone or way to contact him.
He swims in his own little lake and enjoys the library that his uncle
has left him. One day on his rambles, he
meets a vet named Livia. They bond over
their mutual love of the James Harriot books, All Creatures Great and Small,
and start to get to know each other.
Livia is a single mother with a small daughter named Diana. Jake meets more of his neighbors and participates
in a the rural tradition of a hunt for St. Aethelmere’s bones. They find the bones only to discover they
actually are real human bones and not the sticks they started out with. Whose bones have they discovered, why were
they placed there, and how did this person die?
Jake is soon helping the
local police officer, Watson, with solving this mystery. As he gets closer to finding the answers, he
also comes closer to losing his life and those he has begun to hold dear.
I really enjoyed this slow
burn crime thriller. It was one of those
books that I just couldn’t put down. I
really liked the sense of isolation and the man living alone, becoming part of
the land like Thoreau. I enjoyed slowly meeting
the neighbors as Jake did and starting to put the puzzle pieces together. This book was all about the atmosphere and
description of the setting. I loved the
details of Jake walking everywhere, bathing in the lake, and washing his
clothes outside. He also builds himself
a sauna. The characters were also
wonderful and natural. In particular I
really loved Jake and Livia. I did not
solve this mystery myself and was really thinking it was one of the red
herrings.
I also enjoyed the literary
references including Agatha Christie, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Dorothy Sayer, Shakespeare,
etc.
This was Stig Abell’s
first novel, and I am looking forward to reading what he writes next.
This is one I’d like. Thanks for the review
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