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  • Splintered Silence

  • A Bone Gap Travellers Mystery, Book 1
  • By: Susan Furlong
  • Narrated by: Amy Landon
  • Length: 8 hrs and 57 mins
  • 3.5 out of 5 stars (4 ratings)

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Splintered Silence

By: Susan Furlong
Narrated by: Amy Landon
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Summary

Among the Irish Travellers living in the Appalachian Mountains of Tennessee, no one forgets and no one forgives. And as former Marine MP Brynn Callahan finds out when she returns home, it's hard to bury the past when bodies keep turning up....

After an IED explosion abruptly ends her tour of duty, Brynn arrives stateside with PTSD and her canine partner Wilco - both of them bearing the scars of battle. With a mix of affection, curiosity, and misgivings, she goes back to Bone Gap, Tennessee, and the insular culture she'd hoped to escape by enlisting in the Marine Corps.

Marginalized and wary of outsiders, the Irish Travellers keep to themselves in a secluded mountain community, maintaining an uneasy coexistence with the "settled" townspeople of McCreary. When Wilco's training as a cadaver dog leads Brynn to discover a body in the woods, the two worlds collide. Soon it's clear that and Brynn and Wilco are in danger - and they're not the only ones.

After the police identify the dead woman, Brynn is shocked to learn she has a personal connection - and everything she's been told about her past is called into question.

Forming a reluctant alliance with local sheriff Frank Pusser, Brynn must dig up secrets that not only will rattle her close-knit clan to its core, but may forever change her perception of who she is...and put her back in the line of fire.

©2018 Susan Furlong (P)2017 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved. Published by arrangement with Kensington Publishing Corp.
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    5 out of 5 stars
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Riveting

Great book, riveting. Loved the main characters and the dog. Very much looking forward to the next!

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Tedious..?

I wish I could give this book a better rating.
PTSD is harrowing and prejudices exits. But I think the author BELABOURED the prejudices too much, to the extent that it became tedious after a while. By peppering the book with it, it came across more as a whine, which is a shame. I became a little impatient towards the end, and kept thinking 'not again, just get on with the story'. What about the character’s own prejudice (against the hunter who came across the second body)?
Perhaps she would have been better off writing a monograph about the subject. Judicious editing could have combined both and made this book a less ‘tedious' read/listen. This is, after all, a work of fiction.

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