Review by Booklist Review
*Starred Review* PI Roxane Weary is a lot like her father, Frank, a cop killed in the line of duty nine months earlier: she looks like him and drinks like him, and she's taken to sleeping with his former partner. So she goes back to Frank's notebooks when she gets a new case. Danielle Stockton's brother, Brad, is scheduled to die in two months for the murders of Sarah Cook's parents 15 years ago and the presumed murder of Sarah, his girlfriend, whose body was never found. But Danielle is sure she just spotted Sarah in town, so Roxane starts looking for her, thus arousing the ire of the local police force even after she finds the long-buried body of a woman. The body is not Sarah's, but it reveals unsolved murders of women, an anomaly in this small Ohio town. Roxane is a wonderfully complex character, involved in complicated sexual relationships, still struggling with her relationship with her father, and absolutely dogged in her pursuit of the truth. This is a remarkably accomplished debut mystery, with sensitive character development and a heart-stopping denouement. Let's hope there are more Roxane Weary novels on the way.--Leber, Michele Copyright 2017 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Convicted killer Bradford Stockton, whose case propels Lepionka's action-packed if uneven debut, is scheduled to be executed in two months for the stabbing murder 15 years earlier of the parents of his girlfriend, Sarah Cook. Sarah went missing the day of the crime and is presumed dead. After Brad's sister, Danielle, thinks she sees Sarah outside a suburban Ohio gas station, she hires PI Roxane Weary to find Sarah, in the hope that doing so will prove Brad's innocence. While Roxane investigates, she's harassed by phone calls from someone who breathes heavily but says nothing. Moreover, her car is broken into, the police keep pulling her over for no reason, and she spots a man looking into her apartment window. A loving but dysfunctional family and a habit of overdrinking don't make matters any easier for her. Lepionka has created an appealing, relatable lead, but she falters near the end as Roxane takes too many unlikely risks. Agent: Jill Marsal, Marsal Lyon Literary Agency. (June) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
Lepionka's assured debut introduces persistent and problematic PI Roxane Weary, who walks the mean streets of Columbus, OH, fueled by sugar, alcohol, bad relationships, and the love of her dysfunctional family. Weary reluctantly takes on the closed case of a death row inmate and discovers connections to other cold cases, including one investigated by her late cop father. A swift-moving, gritty mystery that will keep readers glued to their beach towels. (LJ 5/1/17) © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A down-and-out private investigator works a case that takes her back to her own past.Ohio death row inmate Brad Stockton's sister, Danielle, hasn't given up on saving his life. The private investigator she reaches out to, Roxane Weary, can't say the same about herself. Following her father's death, she's been drowning her troubles in bottles of spirits with a chaser of bad relationships, including bedding Tom, her fathers' longtime work colleague, and trying to rekindle an affair with Catherine, who's been stringing Roxane along since high school. Reluctant to take on a case but more reluctant to go without money, Roxane agrees to look into Danielle's claim that one of Brad's alleged murder victims, Sarah Cook, is actually alive and well. Though Roxane is sure the story is a fantasy, she can't deny the fact that Sarah's body was never found. True, there's the highly suggestive evidence of the bodies of both of Sarah's parents at the scene, along with the knife found in the back of Brad's car. But Roxane knows that someone could easily have planted that last item. Perhaps someone in Belmont wasn't ready for black Brad to be dating blonde Sarah. After all, the town isn't known for progressive values or inclusiveness, as Roxane finds out firsthand when the local police make it known how unwelcome her investigation is. And even though Roxane doesn't believe Sarah is still alive, when she finds a connection between the case and investigations in her father's past, she vows to keep going until she uncovers the truth, whatever the risk. Lepionka's debut confidently portrays complex characters with multiple, sometimes contradictory, motivations and offers an unusually naturalistic perspective on sexual identity. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.