One Step Too Far: A Novel (A Frankie Elkin Novel)
One Step Too Far: A Novel (A Frankie Elkin Novel) book cover

One Step Too Far: A Novel (A Frankie Elkin Novel)

Hardcover – January 18, 2022

Price
$13.99
Format
Hardcover
Pages
416
Publisher
Dutton
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0593185414
Dimensions
6.23 x 1.34 x 9.27 inches
Weight
1.4 pounds

Description

Praise for One Step Too Far “It’s not often that a thriller so deeply casts us into the darkness of both nature and the human heart. . . . Terrifying, primal, and very, very tense. Read it with your heart in your throat—but read it.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review) “Gardner’s latestxa0series continues to excel; instinctual, tragedy-driven Frankie is one of crime fiction’s most intriguing newxa0sleuths.” — Booklist (starred review) “The appeal of Lisa Gardner’s second Frankie Elkin mystery lies mainly with the meticulously researched science and lore on surviving in the wilderness--and with the endearingly strange Frankie herself.” —The Washington Post "Gardner's gripping sequel to 2021's Before She Disappeared . . . winds toward a surprising conclusion." —Publishers Weekly "An authentic Wyoming setting, a tantalizing mystery, and a Labrador named Daisy. What’s not to like?" —C. J. Box, #1 New York Times bestsellingxa0author of Dark Sky "Master storyteller and avid hiker Lisa Gardner has written the book she was meant to write, an immersive, propulsive, utterly chilling, and yet deeply moving wilderness thriller in which her intimate knowledge of and love for the rugged Wyoming backcountry shines through on every terrifying page. Without a doubt, the best book I’ve read all year.” —Karen Dionne, author of The Marsh King’s Daughter "Visceral, unpredictable, and terrifying. You’ll never hike into the woods again without thinking of Lisa Gardner’s One Step Too Far ." —Robert Dugoni, #1 Amazon bestselling author of the Tracy Crosswhite series "Propulsive, adrenaline-fueled, terrifyingly real." —Clare Mackintosh, bestselling author of Hostage " And Then There Were None meets Deliverance . Gardner’s latest will have you flipping pages at breakneck speed, guessing and gasping." —Linwood Barclay, author of Find You First “You’ll root for Frankie (and for a diligent cadaver dog named Daisy) on every page of this tense, crackling read.” — People “A hybrid combination of C. J. Box and Nevada Barr at their level best . . . this is thriller writing of the absolute highest order, as great a novel as it is a page-turner.” — Providence Journal “Gardner can be counted on to send a shiver down the spine, but this one exceeds even her high standards.” — Daily Mail “Beyond brilliant . . . A mix of beautiful prose and ingenious, intense, edgy dialogue . . . Perfect for fans of unputdownable, gritty cat-and-mouse mysteries, compassionate underdog protagonists with self-deprecating senses of humor, ruthless killers, and ‘didn’t see it coming, OMG’ endings.” — Library Journal (starred review) “A tour de force in suspense and red herrings with a twist ending I did not even begin to anticipate.” — Bookpage (starred review) “Riveting. I enjoyed every bit of One Step Too Far .” — The St. Louis Post-Dispatch “As is her trademark, the thrills grow and the storyline gets more complex as the group goes farther into the wilderness. Gardner has another winning series to keep us up at night.” —The Florida Times-Union “Everything you could ask for in a great mystery: secrets, suspense, excellent pace, and great characters.” — Mystery and Suspense “ One Step Too Far takes us on a harrowing journey into the dark wilderness of the human heart, where fear and desperation reveal exactly who we are.” — New York Journal of Books “ One Step Too Far builds atmosphere and tension subtly and skillfully, drawing us further into the adventure even as we start wanting to pull back and get everyone home.” — Fresh Fiction “A page turner from the beginning . . . This book kept me on the edge of my seat the entire time I was reading it.” —The Buzz Magazine “I didn’t want it to end.” — The Book Review Crew “Phenomenal . . . If you are a living, breathing human, you should read this book.” — Nerd Problems “ One Step Too Far is a fascinating, engrossing, thrilling, and chilling mystery that will keep you reading late into the wee hours.” — All About Romance “This dark, tense, terrifying book will have you on the edge of your seat.” — Napa Valley Register Lisa Gardner is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of twenty-one suspense novels, including The Neighbor , which won Thriller of the Year from the International Thriller Writers. An avid hiker, traveler, and cribbage player, she lives in the mountains of New Hampshire with her family. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 The first three men came stumbling into town shortly after ten a.m., babbling of dark shapes and eerie screams and their missing buddy Scott and their other buddy Tim, who set out from their campsite before dawn to get help. "Bear, bear, bear," first guy moaned. "Mountain lion!" second guy insisted. Third guy vomited. Maybe, maybe not, Marge Santi thought as she sidestepped the spew of liquid. Marge situated the young men in a corner booth of her diner, then got on the phone and summoned Nemeth. To be polite, Marge also contacted Sheriff Jim Kelley, likeable guy, respected by the locals, but an officer with a whole county to tend and the drive to prove it. For immediate action, Nemeth it was. Nemeth, former Shoshone National Forest district ranger, now local guide, knew what he was doing. First, he plied the three men with coffee. To judge by the rank odor of fear and booze leaking out of their pores, they didn't need anything else. Two cups later, he had most of the story. Five guys set out into the woods for a bachelor party weekend. All friends since college, all with some experience camping, though the trio agreed future groom Tim was The Man. Had been backcountry hiking with his father since he was six. He was the reason they were camping. The other four wouldn't have minded a golf weekend or quality time at a casino/resort. But for Tim, the woods were his happy place, so into the mountains they'd gone. Fully equipped, packs, tents, sleeping bags, two-burner propane camp stove, cans of beans and franks, and yeah, as much beer and Maker's Mark as five fit young men could carry. Which was to say, a lot. But they weren't total idiots. Again, Tim knew his shit and oversaw their packing himself. They'd hiked in seven miles yesterday, looking for the perfect camping spot in one of the deep canyons, near a broad river. Once they found it, they unloaded packs, pitched tents, and popped open the first six-pack, leaving the other four to chill in the ice-cold water. Dusk came fast this time of year. But all was good. They built up a fire, roasted hot dogs, and ate baked beans straight out of the can. Many fart jokes ensued. More beer, followed by whiskey chasers. How much booze can five young healthy men drink? Plenty. But no place to be, no cars to drive, no nagging cell phones to answer given the lack of reception. Just them and the starlit sky. They killed off the first bottle of Maker's Mark, started in on the second. Tim sat next to the fire and scratched away on a piece of paper. Working on his wedding vows, writing a letter to his beloved? They teased, but he refused to fess up. Hour grew late. How late, no one knew and it hardly mattered. They finally turned in for the night, two men each in two tents, Tim, the future groom, in a single shell all by himself. One of his last nights on earth sleeping alone. Should enjoy it while he could, they teased. Then . . . A sharp keening wail. Crashing in the trees around them. "Grizzly," Neil said now, sitting in the diner. "Mountain lion," Josh insisted. Miggy, short for Miguel, crawled out of the booth and vomited some more. Maybe, maybe not, Nemeth thought. Marge got a mop. At the camp, the men had burst from their tents, flashlights bobbing, nerves strung tight, trying to pinpoint the source of the disturbance. Build up the fire, Tim demanded. Make noise of their own. Double-check the food stash they'd strung up in the trees away from their campsite. Which is why it took a few minutes, maybe as long as five or ten, before they realized their party of five had become four. Where the hell was Scott? Miggy had been sharing his tent and Miggy had no idea. "No . . . fucking idea," Miggy clarified for Nemeth, in between bouts of dry heaving. Tim, future groom, got serious. Scott could've wandered off to pee. Scott could've just plain wandered off, drunk and disoriented. But given the cold temps, dangerous terrain, and carnivorous local wildlife, they needed to find him. Arranging their group into two pairs, Tim directed the first duo to start searching north of the campfire, while the other would cover the woods to the south. Whoever found Scott first would blow their emergency signal whistle. Except they didn't find him. Up and down the water, bushwhacking deeper and deeper into the forest. No Scott. But they did find trampled brush. Broken tree limbs. Possibly blood. "Grizzly bear," Neil moaned. "Mountain lion," Josh ventured. "Fuck me," Miggy whispered. That, Nemeth agreed with. Four a.m., the fall air brutally crisp, the clear night relentlessly dark, Tim made the decision: They needed help, and given the total lack of cell reception, hiking back out was the only way to get it. As the most experienced-and sober-member of their party, he grabbed his pack, clicked on his trusty headlamp, and set out for civilization. Neil, Josh, and Miggy huddled around the fire for another three hours, pounding water and working themselves into a terrified frenzy. First glimpse of daylight, they refilled their canteens and hit the trail. Left everything behind. Tents, sleeping bags, food. Young men, fit and now semi-sober, they were on a mission to get the hell out of there as fast as humanly possible. Still tough going. They half ran, half stumbled their way up and down steep terrain, clambering over boulders, careening through brush, splashing across streams. Till they came to the trailhead and their rented ATVs. All five of them. Shouldn't there be only four? Which is when they started to get worried about Tim. ATVs to town. Town to diner. And now . . . help. Nemeth. Sheriff. Cavalry. Hunters with big guns. Any kind of assistance, all kinds of assistance. Help. Nemeth unfolded a topographical map, had the men walk him through their journey. They knew their initial path, which, like a lot of backcountry trails, started out marked before hitting rugged, less traversed terrain. Definitely not for the faint of heart. But the men could guess where along the river they'd camped. From there, Nemeth ran his finger along various geological features, thinking, thinking, thinking. Marge worked the phone, brewed more coffee. Being a mountain town, they had a local team of fifteen volunteer search and rescuers. Given the circumstances, however, this would be all hands on deck. Neighbors contacted neighbors, people started pouring in, and Nemeth did what he did best: organized the efforts. First up, hasty team. He wanted his best searchers dispersed along key perimeter areas encircling the PLS-point last seen-of their two missing hikers. Taking into account the average distance a person could travel an hour in that terrain, Nemeth drew a massive ring around the site, identifying their prime search area. Hasty teams would hike, ATV, or horseback into various points along this ring, conducting a down-and-dirty search of the trail and surrounding areas as they swept toward the center. They'd look for the men, but also look for signs of human passage, which might provide additional data on where Tim the experienced hiker and Scott the drunk buddy could've gone. Ramsey, a town of four thousand situated at the edge of the Popo Agie Wilderness, was filled with experienced outsdoorspeople. The mountains were both a lifestyle and a professional calling. Nemeth was a veteran general working with expert foot soldiers. Which made it very hard for the family to accept what happened next. The first eight hours of the search, when Scott turned up wandering blindly along the rocky banks of the river. Still clad in his long underwear, face covered in scratches, fingernails caked with dirt. Clearly disoriented and shell-shocked. "Grizzly," Neil whispered. "Mountain lion," Josh repeated. "Shit . . ." Miggy moaned. Even sobered up, Scott couldn't provide any details about where he'd been or what he'd done. He remembered drinking with his buddies around the campfire and teasing Tim for working on his wedding vows. Scott went to bed and . . . Daylight. Cold. So cold. Wandering in nothing but his stocking feet, till he found his way back to the river and followed it. Eventually, people appeared and a shrill whistle blew and now he was here and hey, where was Tim, anyway? Timothy O'Day. Thirty-three years old, first member of his family to go to college, graduating from Oregon State University with a degree in mechanical engineering. Described by his family and friends as a regular MacGyver. Engaged to be married to Latisha Gibbons, whom he'd met three years ago through his college buddy Neil. Latisha hailed from Atlanta, worked in marketing, and spent her weekends in a state of perpetual motion, hiking, biking, skiing, every bit as crazy as her future husband. Everyone said they looked beautiful together. The ultimate, modern-day L.L.Bean couple. They'd buy a house, adopt a Lab, and produce 2.2 gorgeous children to chase along trails, down mountains, across streams. Theirs was to be a wonderful, magnificent life lived out loud. Until hours stretched into days stretched into weeks. Tim's parents arrived on-site. His father, Martin, driving from Oregon to Wyoming with his mountaineering equipment piled in the back. Marty was a lean, nut-brown professional carpenter and experienced outdoorsman ready to take up the charge. In contrast, Tim's mother, Patrice, appeared nearly translucent. Cancer survivor, the locals learned. Fifteen years ago, multiple bouts, barely made it. Marge made it her mission to serve the woman coffee aboveboard and administer a little medicinal assistance on the down low. Martin conferred with Nemeth and Sheriff Kelley, who'd taken charge of the search efforts. In the beginning, Martin would nod, approve, express his gratitude. By day five, he questioned and stewed. Day seven he headed into the woods himself, snarling under his breath when both Nemeth and Sheriff Kelley tried to hold him back. The hasty teams stopped being hasty. Search efforts slowed, grew more methodical, no longer hoping for an easy victory, but now settling in to scour the wilderness foot by foot, trail by trail, grid by grid. Choppers scanned with infrared. Air-scenting dogs tracked areas of interest. Couple of psychics called in with hot tips, most involving flowing rivers or dark caves. More volunteers showed up. The National Guard arrived to assist. Until twenty-three long, arduous, exhausting days later, as the temperatures plummeted and snow blanketed the upper elevations . . . The searchers faded back to their real lives. The canine teams went home. The choppers were redirected to new missions. And only family and friends remained. Martin O'Day fought the good fight the longest. He had a lifetime of experience and the advantage of being the one who'd trained his son. He headed back into the mountains, expedition after expedition, while Patrice held press conferences with her future daughter-in-law by her side. Twin advertisements for grief and desperation. The college friends, Neil, Josh, Miggy, and Scott, did their best to assist while having to accommodate the demands of jobs, family, obligations of their own. Martin O'Day searched for his son. Then he searched for signs of his son. And then he searched for his son's body. "Grizzly bear," Neil whispered. "Mountain lion," Josh argued. "Goddammit," Miggy said. As for the real answer, the woods never said. Seasons turned into years and Timothy O'Day became one more missing hiker, vanished without a trace. Here are things most folks donÕt know: At least sixteen hundred people, if not many more times that number, remain missing on national public lands. Hikers, day-trippers, children on family camping trips. One moment they were with us, the next theyÕre gone. There's no national database to track such cases. No centralized training for search and rescue or, in many cases, even clear jurisdictional lines to identify who's in charge of such operations. There's also little in the way of designated funding. A large-scale search effort can cost upwards of three hundred thousand dollars a day. For many county sheriffs, that's their annual budget. Meaning when the volunteers go away, so do rescue efforts. Leaving behind a family with little hope and no closure. Most will continue on their own for as long as they can. Some, such as Martin O'Day, continue the hunt every year, assisted by friends, funded by online campaigns, and advised by various experts. According to the article I'm reading in a small, local paper, Martin's been at it for five years. This August will be his final attempt. His wife, Patrice, is now dying from the same cancer that tried to kill her before. She wants to see her son one last time. She wants her body to be buried next to his. I sit in a diner not so dissimilar to the one Tim O'Day's hiking buddies must've rushed into the morning after. I've spent the past twelve hours on a bus and am now catching my breath, somewhere west of Cheyenne and south of Jackson, Wyoming. I don't particularly know, and I'm enjoying a sense of freedom-life on the road-as I read the article again, then again. Something about the story has sunk into my skin, refusing to let go. My name is Frankie Elkin and finding missing people is what I do. When the police have given up, when the public no longer remembers, when the media has never bothered to care, I start looking. For no money, no recognition, and most of the time, with no help. I have no professional training. I'm not a former detective or registered PI or ex-anything special. I'm only me. An average, middle-aged white woman, short on belongings, long on regret. I tried real life once. There was a house, a job, even a man who loved me enough to hold my hand as I fought my way to sober. In the end, the walls closed in; the relentless sameness drowned me. And the man who loved me . . . One day, a woman in my AA meeting talked about her daughter who'd disappeared and the police's lack of interest in finding a young woman with a troubled past. I became intrigued, started asking questions, and the next thing I knew, I'd found the daughter. Unfortunately, the daughter's fucked-up boyfriend had chosen to blow off her head and abandon her body in a crack house rather than let her go. But despite the case not having a happy ending, or maybe because of that, one search became another, which became another. Ten years later, this is now my life. I travel from place to place, armed with only my good intentions. Currently, I've been traveling by bus to Idaho to take up the case of Eugene Santiago, an eight-year-old boy now missing sixteen months. I read about Eugene's disappearance in one of the various online cold case forums I frequent. Something about his soulful dark eyes, his very serious smile. I don't always know why I choose the cases I do. There are so many of them out there. But I spot a headline, I read an article, and then I just know.Kind of like now, I think, setting down the local paper.xa0 I haven’t done a woodland search in forever.xa0 Mostly I work small rural communities or dense urban neighborhoods.xa0 I gravitate more toward kids than adults, minorities more than Caucasians.xa0 But my mission is to help the underserved, and as the families of those sixteen hundred people vanished in public parks will tell you, they are so underserved.Mostly, I keep thinking of Timothy O’Day’s mother who just wants to be buried next to her son.Eugene Santiago has been missing for nearly a year and half.xa0 A few more weeks won’t matter.xa0 And while there may be no chance of finding Timothy O’Day alive, I know from experience that finally bringing home a body still makes a difference.I pick up the bus schedule, and plot my new destination. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • From #1
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author Lisa Gardner, a chilling thriller about a young man gone missing in the wilderness of Wyoming . . . and the secrets uncovered by the desperate effort to find him
  • Timothy O’Day knew the woods. Yet when he disappeared on the first night of a bachelor party camping trip with his best friends in the world, he didn’t leave a trace. What he did leave behind were two heartbroken parents, a crew of guilt-ridden groomsmen, and a pile of clues that don’t add up.   Frankie Elkin doesn’t know the woods, but she knows how to find people. So when she reads that Timothy’s father is organizing one last search, she heads to Wyoming. Despite the rescue team’s reluctance, she joins them. But as they hike into the mountains, it becomes clear that there’s something dangerous at work in the woods . . . or someone who is willing to do anything to stop them from going any farther.   Running out of time and up against the worst man and nature have to offer, Frankie and the search party will discover what evil awaits those who go one step too far . . .

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(8.7K)
★★★★
25%
(3.6K)
★★★
15%
(2.2K)
★★
7%
(1K)
-7%
(-1017)

Most Helpful Reviews

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there are better thrillers out there!!

I was really looking forward to this one bc I enjoyed the first in series so much. Well, it was a big disappointment. It took so very long to get to any developments or action in the plot. It was slow and boring. If you enjoy camping or hiking perhaps you could have a keener connection to the setting. I do neither so all that was lost on me. It was so slow and then it seemed to be fully explained in a few paragraphs! Meh. Also - the first in series made Frankie the main character and in this one she seemed second fiddle to it all. For a series based on her, it felt ‘off’.
9 people found this helpful
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A long and winding road to nowhere.

Sorry. I don't understand how this book got so many wonderful reviews, because it stinks! I have to ask, is somebody somewhere paying people or robot controllers,or members of the Russian military, to write fake reviews saying how good 3rd rate books are? I'm sorry, but it's a real question.

I stopped reading this book at page 177. I could not force myself to go on. That is because, by that time, the book contained no mysteries, no thrills and no suspense. Just a lot of dull talk followed by more dull talk. Plus, their was quite a bit of dull, sluggish talk.

A few people compated this snoozer to Deliverence. I still remember the 1st time I read Deliverence. It started a bit slow and then turned into a life v. death rocket. Heck, it even involved some good old fashioned (possible) murder. One Step Too Far starts a bit slow, and then gets slower, and slower and slower, until it eventually starts to collect Social Security.

Please permit me to provide an example of what I'm ranting about. The plot involves a group of not too bright people, and a dog (who seems to be hearing and scent impaired), who go into the wilderness to look for a long missing body. They hang their food in a tree and OMG, someone or something knocks it down and some of the food goes missing.

Ahh, I hate to be the one to tell you this but that is the exact kind of thing that sometimes happens on a wilderness camping trip. DUH!!!!! Because there are these things called wild animals who live in the wilderness, and they enjoy taking food from slow thinking people, eating it, and then watching the stupid people starve. Oh, I KEED! I KEED! The animals will usually eat the people before they starve. They taste fresher that way. Mystery solved.

[In this mess of a book, one jerk says, "The food bags. They appear to be shredded by claws, but what kind of animals leave no prints?" ONE ANSWER: Well, the kind that have claws. If the real question was why did the animal leave no mark's on the ground well, sometimes they travel tree to tree, sometimes it is difficult to see their paw prints on the ground (for various reasons) and sometimes they can fly. "Get to the Choppa."]

The only redeeming social value that this book has: you can take it on your next wilderness hike and use it for "TP."

Thus ends my rant.
5 people found this helpful
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Not her best

So it’s hard to write a review about a mystery without giving away the ending. This was a page turner until the last 60 pages or so. Page after page of the main characters trying to escape and the ending was so absolutely ridiculous I can’t believe it. Like seriously bad. And you don’t guess the killer because there are no clues at all til they actually reveal the killer. Bad. Bad. Bad.
4 people found this helpful
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Thrilling Suspense

From #1 New York Times bestselling author Lisa Gardner, a thrilling new novel that sends missing persons expert Frankie Elkin into a national forest in Wyoming looking for a young man who disappeared without a trace. But when the search team encounters immediate threats to their survival, Frankie realizes she’s up against something very dark—and she’s running out of time. An entire search team went into the forest, but will any of them make it out alive?

I've been a Lisa Gardner fan forever, and this novel set me back on my heels. The survival tips imbedded in the story gave it a real sense of the dangers these characters faced. I never saw the ending coming, and that's a real and rare treat for a thriller lover like me. Highly recommended! #OneStepTooFar #NetGalley #SaltMarshAuthors
4 people found this helpful
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Top Notch Storytelling

If you haven’t already discovered Frankie Elkin, you are missing out. Few characters in literature are as endearingly flawed, fiercely determined to overcome, and utterly broken. Frankie puts her skills to the test again in this story of a man who simply disappeared. He was a wilderness expert of sorts, and nothing about the case makes sense. Ms. Gardner deftly juggles a large cast of memorable characters with a complicated plot that not only holds the reader’s attention in a vise-like grip but moves them as well. Truly superb.
3 people found this helpful
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Should be titled "Many Steps Too Far"

Takes one beyond imagination as to the what, why, and how the absurd things could have happened in the prior years and on the current search through the terrain of mountains and woods, and caves in Wyoming.
Just too long and drawn out.
3 people found this helpful
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Frankie Elkin’s Story

Heart racing, pulse pounding, and gripping thriller! Lisa Gardner has managed to give us another action packed thriller that will leave you on the edge of your seat, and you’ll never see the ending coming.

Frankie Elkin is a 40’s something recovering alcoholic who drifts from place to place looking for the missing when everyone else has given up hope. She goes where she feels compelled. She has no formal training, but her mission is to bring them home, to give closure to their families.

This time she brings her self taught expertise to Wyoming to assist with bringing a young groom home. Her search will take her into a national forest where she quickly becomes not the hunter, but the prey. The forest is full of dark secrets and Frankie must quickly uncover them if she hopes to survive.

This book was excellent, one of my favorite Lisa Gardner books to date! Frankie Elkin is a strong woman lead. She’s well written and extremely relatable. The plot was fast paced and well executed. This is the kind of book that you want to stay up all night reading. I highly recommend it!
3 people found this helpful
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WOW

WOW!
What a thoroughly taut, tense, and engaging mystery. It is filled with breath-holding chases through the back country of Wyoming. I was engrossed from beginning to end and hope that readers will be equally as captivated as I was.
NOTE: No harm comes to Daisy the dog.

This is the second book featuring Frankie Elkin, who I am so glad that Gardner brought back for another installment. She's a complex woman with a driving mission to help find missing people, and she'll use any means necessary to bring closure to the family. She hears the story of a young man who disappeared in a national forest five years previously during a drunken bachelor party weekend. His friends, father, and some other searchers are headed out to find his remains, and Frankie joins the group. It becomes clear that they aren't alone, and that everyone is hiding something.

I couldn't turn the pages fast enough to find out what was going to happen and hoping that everyone from the group would survive. There's a large cast of characters and it was difficult for me to keep them straight at first, but eventually I got to know all of them and was moved by their different struggles. I also liked how their lives caused Frankie to ponder her own life and choices.

There is so much tense action throughout, but it is also tempered by some humor and real heart. I loved Frankie in the first book, and I love her even more now. Just as Gardner's other characters have become integral parts of my reading life, Frankie now holds a place of honor along with D.D., Tessa, Quincy, Rainie, and the rest. This book can totally be read as a standalone, but why would you want to do that? Go get a copy of Before She Disappeared and get to know Frankie from the beginning.

I voluntarily reviewed a complimentary copy of this book, all opinions are my own.
3 people found this helpful
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Love the character of Frankie Gardner and what an ending!!!

I love Lisa Gardner and have enjoyed many of her books including the first in this series with Frankie Elkin, “Before She Disappeared”.

This novel has a completely different setting. Instead of a run down neighborhood in Brooklyn we are transported to the wilderness of Wyoming. Not just any wilderness, but an incredibly difficult area to search with the culmination at sheer cliff face, almost impossible to climb.

How did Frankie get here?? She is reading a local Wyoming newsletter. There is a mother who is dying, who wants only to bring her missing boy home. Something about this case calls to her and she gets off the bus in the small town of Ramsey.

It doesn’t take Frankie long to find the proposed search party conferring in the local bar. They are a group of 8 which include a cadaver dog, Daisy and her handler Luciana and a professional Big Foot hunter.

Tim has been missing ever since a campout with his friends before his wedding, 5 years ago. The search had been extensive with many experienced hunters and teams of search dogs but no trace of Tim has ever been found.

Husband and father, Martin, is determined to lead one more search party for Tim to fulfill his wife’s dying wish.

When one of the group, Josh, becomes ill, Frankie talks the group into allowing her to fill his spot. Frankie has no professional training in hiking the wilderness but, using Josh’s backpack and supplies, she sets off at dawn with the group.

NO ONE IS PREPARED FOR WHAT WILL GREET THEM THIS TIME!!! Frankie is very good at getting people to talk, finding out their secrets and solving puzzling cases. What she lacks in training she makes up for with a quick, problem solving mind that is always one step ahead of everyone else.

No spoilers here but this short quote after two days of hiking and various unforeseen actions:

“THIS WHOLE THING HAS BECOME SOMETHING BIGGER THAN DISCOVERING TIM’S BODY. SOMETHING MORE SINISTER.”

I can’t remember ever crying with the characters in a thriller, but I did this time!! Ms. Gardner’s skill at describing and rounding out her characters is stellar. The writing flows well and I felt immersed in the wilderness of Wyoming. We also get more answers about Frankie's background and why she is called to find the missing whom the police and others have abandoned.

Don’t miss this one if you love character driven novels. It’s more than a thriller, it’s a study in human behavior, THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY!!

My heart was racing through many parts of this book, and the ENDING, WOW!!

I received an ARC of this novel from the publisher through NetGalley. It was my pleasure to read and review this novel
2 people found this helpful
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bored to tears

i like stories about disappearances so i had hopes for this one. but after having read half the book with NOTHING happening, i gave up. super boring... ZERO suspense... just ridiculous. i took "one step too far" in buying this book which was wrongly classified as a suspense story.
1 people found this helpful