Photograph

Brian Freeman, 1963-

Book - 2025

Private investigator Shannon Wells receives a client with a strange request: Find out who I really am. Now the woman is dead, and the only clue to who she was and why she was murdered is an old photograph of a little girl. The hunt for answers takes Shannon from Florida to rural Michigan as she peels away the layers of a shocking cold case that has rippled violently into the present.

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Subjects
Genres
Suspense fiction
Thrillers (Fiction)
Psychological fiction
Detective and mystery fiction
Novels
Romans
Published
Ashland, OR : Blackstone Publishing 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Brian Freeman, 1963- (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"Version 2"--Title page verso.
Physical Description
300 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781665109765
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this immersive standalone from Freeman (The Bourne Vendetta), Florida PI Shannon Wells grapples with haunting visions while trying to make sense of a particularly confounding job. When Faith Selby hires Shannon to look into her own past, Shannon can't find much. Then Faith is murdered, and her daughter, Kate, approaches Shannon with an enigmatic clue: a 26-year-old photograph of a young girl, taken by Faith in a motel parking lot. Shannon's quest to figure out the photo's origins takes her to Michigan, where she teams up with police detective Chuck Kimble and learns the photo may be linked to a cold case murder from 1999. All the while, Shannon is plagued by memories of a past sexual assault and nightmares of witnessing the murder of a woman named Jenny. Freeman's plotting is intoxicatingly knotty, though a few of the answers he provides are far-fetched. Still, well-developed characters and the author's sharp attention to detail make this work more often than not. Psychological thriller fans who are willing to suspend their disbelief should enjoy themselves. Agent: Deborah Schneider, Gelfman Schneider. (Oct.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A tense psychological thriller introducing a strong female protagonist. Kate Selby visits the coastal Florida office of Shannon Wells Investigations and demands to know why her mother, Faith, had hired a private eye a year earlier. It turns out that Faith had wanted Shannon to find out her true identity, which Shannon had been unable to do. Now Kate says her mother has been murdered. What follows is a dark, moody mystery revolving around a 25-year-old photograph taken by Faith that appeared in a coffee table book namedMillennium Memories, depicting images of ordinary people doing ordinary things. In the photo, a young girl is standing in front of a motel vending machine and holding a red can of Coke, her back to the camera. But there had been a murder in the motel parking lot that night in Michigan so long ago. Now the killer wants to eliminate witnesses and seems to have tracked down Faith. Who was the girl in the photograph, and what happened to her? And is Faith's death connected to the recent triple murder of a prosecutor and his family? Shannon has horrible nightmares about a man coming to kill her, and she has a scar on her face from an event in her own past. A strange woman named Maro in Cocoa Beach tells Shannon that a man killed her in past lives and is about to do it again unless she can kill him first, and she's unsure whether to believe the woman's story. Is Maro addled by the lightning strike she survived as a child, or did it give her special powers? There are moody scenes involving darkness, wind-driven rain, and lonely roads that bring to mind the opening chapters of a Stephen King novel. And those roads twist a lot as Freeman unloads one surprise after another. He has written several excellent adventures includingRobert Ludlum's The Bourne Evolution (2020). An enjoyable read. May there be more Shannon Wells tales to come. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.