![In the Clearing (Tracy Crosswhite Book 3) by [Dugoni, Robert]](https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/61hp7kEoJhL.jpg)
Publisher: Thomas & Mercer
Date of publication: May 17th, 2016
Genre: Mystery, Thriller, Crime, Suspense, Contemporary, Detective, Adult
Series: Tracy Crosswhite Series
The Academy—Book 0.25
Third Watch—Book 0.5
My Sister’s Grave—Book 1
Her Final Breath—Book 2
In the Clearing—Book 3
The Trapped Girl—Book 4
Close to Home—Book 5
A Steep Price—Book 6
A Cold Trail—Book 7
In Her Tracks—Book 8
The Last Line—Book 8.5
What She Found—Book 9
Purchase Links: Amazon |Audible
Goodreads synopsis:
Detective Tracy Crosswhite has a skill, and a soft spot, for tackling unsolved crimes. Having lost her own sister to murder at a young age, Tracy has dedicated her career to bringing justice and closure to the families and friends of victims of crime.
So when Jenny, a former police academy classmate, and protégé, asks Tracy to help solve a cold case that involves the suspicious suicide of a Native American high school girl forty years earlier, Tracy agrees. Following up on evidence Jenny’s detective father collected when he was the investigating deputy, Tracy probes one small town’s memory and finds dark, well-concealed secrets hidden within the community’s fabric. Can Tracy uphold the promise she’s made to the dead girl’s family and deliver the truth of what happened to their daughter? Or will she become the next victim?
Want a book you can devour in one sitting? Then read In the Clearing. I was completely glued to this one and couldn’t put it down.
The main storyline and the subplot were both fantastic. The author does a great job of alternating between the cold case and the one Tracy is currently working on, seamlessly moving between past and present—and even between different perspectives. That’s something I usually struggle with in books like this, but here it absolutely worked. The way both cases come together in the end is chilling. I actually got goosebumps.
I did figure out who killed Kimi about halfway through the book—but not because it was obvious in a bad way. There were plenty of red herrings and apparent dead ends, so when everything was revealed, I was still shocked. And there’s a major twist I did not see coming.
What surprised me most is that even though this is part of a series, it works perfectly as a standalone. I usually avoid reading books out of order because characters and plots tend to bleed together. Not here. What happens in previous books stays in previous books.