Home » Posts tagged "Kara Thomas"

Book Review: Lost to Dune Road by Kara Thomas

Cover art for Lost to Dune Road by Kara Thomaso

Lost to Dune Road by Kara Thomas

Thomas and Mercer, 2024

ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1662509568

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition, audiobook

 

 

First as a journalist, and then as an investigator, Natalee Ellerin hunts monsters. When writing about the unsolved murder of a young woman leads to the end of her career, she blames herself for mistakes. However, years later, when another young woman is on life support after being attacked in circumstances that are linked to that earlier murder, Natalee knows she must follow through and find out what is going on in an elite enclave on Long Island.

 

The monsters in Lost to Dune Road by Kara Thomas are predators, crooked policemen, and wealthy men who think they are above the law.  This gripping story is part crime novel, detective mystery, psychological thriller, and even a love story. In the end, the point will be to find the guilty, but it will take more than just a nose for a good story and the right questions for Natalee to expose the pattern of sordid crimes against women that are occurring with regularity. Natalee is savvy, sharp, and vulnerable, and her deep sense of loyalty and need to see justice realized compel her risk her safety and the relationships that are precious to her.

 

Kara Thomas has created a long cast of characters who are believable and complex. The action in this novel is fast-paced with new characters and subplots popping up with satisfying frequency without illogical twists thrown in merely for effect.  Readers will also find that the novel brings to mind the real-life horrors from current news, like Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking. These are the crimes, victims, and perpetrators that are hidden in plain sight and so, in some ways, the most terrifying to discover.

 

Reviewed by Nova Hadley

 

Book Review: Out of the Ashes by Kara Thomas

Out of the Ashes by Kara Thomas

Thomas and Mercer, 2023

ISBN-13 ‎978-1662509537

Available: Paperback; Kindle

 

Samantha, a nurse in a hospital ICU, is rushing to leave Queens and head back to her small hometown in New York, at the start of Kara Thomas’s engrossing thriller Out of the Ashes. It’s late at night, and as she passes a cruiser, she confesses to having been “skittish around law enforcement” since she was a tween. “No need to behave like a criminal,” she says to herself. “I hadn’t killed anyone. Not yet.” But, it is surprisingly soon that she assists in her very sick uncle’s suicide, and it is then that a flood of memories engulfs her as she has returned to the place where her mother, father, and little sister were shot and their home destroyed by fire in an unsolved murder several years ago.

 

Kara Thomas doesn’t waste any time plunging the reader into the fascinating recent history of Carny, New York and the sometimes complicated lives of Samantha’s relatives, friends, and enemies. We learn about the corrupt cop she fears, the addict who was once her friend, her harsh aunt, her loving father, and the men in the family farm business that seem to have some sort of hold over the town. In sharp, spare detail, Thomas draws multi-faceted characters and reveals their unique experiences with each other, experiences that tie them together in unexpected, for the reader, ways.

 

Samantha is an exciting protagonist: gutsy, smart, and aggressive. Her determination to find out whether her little sister might still be alive leads to a fast-paced investigation of people Sam already suspects to have been involved and those she adds to her list. Also, a detective new to the case poses alternative theories for Sam to consider. Whereas other crime novels might show us things are not as they seem, Thomas shows us Sam’s perspective as an unchanging story that steadily becomes more of what it seems. Sam herself tells the gripping story of her own weaknesses and mistakes and is a study in the effects of childhood psychological trauma.

 

There is never a dull moment in Out of the Ashes; it is never predictable. Thomas delves into the complicated: internet research, family histories, and psychological trauma. However, the reader is never forced to accept confusion as the author’s way of deepening the mysteries embedded in the narrative. This is a novel to lose yourself in – and maybe enjoy again someday on the big screen. Highly recommended.

 

Reviewed by Nova Hadley