Cover Image: Bring Them Home

Bring Them Home

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Member Reviews

I really liked this book and although the ending was a bit predictable and wrapped up too nicely, it wouldn't stop me from reading the next book in the series as I feel you get to know more and more behind the main characters as the books develop and their home lives which the author gave us a glimpse of. Having said that it's an enjoyable read with some suspense . I would like to thank the publishers and netgalley for letting me have the arc to review and the opinions expressed are entirely my own and are unbiased.

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I really like this book. The characters were well developed and likeable, or not. This story grabbed me from the very beginning and held my interest throughout the book. This story has excitement, suspense. This is the first book I have read by this author but I will be looking for more to read.

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Thank you NetGalley and Thomas & Mercer for the eARC.
D.S Karen Hart is still upset about a missing 19-year old, Amy, who disappeared 18 months ago when 2 10-year olds go missing. She has to put Amy's case aside and focus on the now and find these 2 little girls. Her suspicions are focused on a strange family, an elderly father with a grown son and daughter. The 2 men are brutish, nasty men, who totally rule the daughter, who is obviously deathly afraid of them. Karen is sure the 2 men were involved with Amy's disappearance and cannot shake the feeling they 're also involved with kidnapping the little girls. Her boss thinks she's obsessed with that family and should look further to find answers to this new crime.
This was a good mystery, the ending was a bit of a surprise, but all in all it was like so many other mysteries, nothing outstanding or different...A pleasant, quick read, but it didn't stand out for me.

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#Bring Them Home; #Net Galley published by Amazon Publishing UK written by D.S. Butler. The UK Publishing should have been a suggestion that this book might have given the American reader some problems. It was hard to understand who the police characters were when they were introduced, maybe not enough explanation of terms and rankings. By the end of the book, I felt like I knew them all, it would have been refreshing to have known them better during my read. I did enjoy the story of the book, it was right on with the title. My attention was captured right from the beginning with the author giving details from the little girls' viewpoint. It was an easy reading and it held my attention. For the American reader, I would suggest more description of terms used for and by the police in Lincolnshire County. Also, it would have been helpful to possibly include a map of this area of England on one of the first pages since i am not familiar with the English countryside. Overall - good book, I enjoyed the read.

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Good read if a bit forgettable... similar to the other police procedurals I read. Still fun to read though

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DS Karen Hart still has not solved the case of missing Amy Fisher, but that case moves to the back burner when two girls disappear from their school. Still reeling from the knowledge that she has been unable to find Fisher, Hart puts all her energies into investing the seemingly close-knit village. Are the residents there hiding something? Butler does a good job building her characters and setting, all in all, a satisfying British police procedural

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Bring Them Home follows Karen, a detective, as she tries to track down the culprit of the missing two 10 year old girls, Emily and Sian, and 19 year Amy in a relatively quiet town.

This was definitely a Criminal Minds, piece-all-the-characters-together kinda vibe. As the story went along we were introduced to more and more suspects, where the reader is left to try and guess who did what.

One suspect family stays at the center light throughout the whole story. The Palmer family is an interestingly dark, and mysterious family that Karen is quite literally obsessed with.

One of the things I really enjoyed in this novel were all the little side stories we got about the main characters and their lives at home. It helped me understand why the detectives always reacted as they did, and why they looked at evidence the way they did. I thought that Butler did a good job making all the main characters three dimensional.

The plot itself was subpar. It wasn’t bad or boring, don’t get me wrong, it was just your typical mystery novel. Although it was fun trying to piece the mystery together, there was nothing shocking or anything that differentiates it from other mystery plots of missing children.

The writing was of a good pace. It was very easy to follow along with what was going on, and I didn’t find myself skimming through paragraphs like I often do when authors incorporate too many useless details (which is usually my biggest turn off in writing style, so i love an author who avoids this).

I think my biggest pet peeve of this story was definitely the repetition, specifically when we were in Karen’s POV. A detail such as “Emily would never go into the farm, we could rule that out.” Would be repeated about three or times within only a few paragraphs.

But nitpicking aside here is the final verdict: this was a good book. Nothing too out of the ordinary, nothing too “oh please god no, make it stop”. I would recommend it for people who love a classic mystery.

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I so adored this book! It has brilliant main characters, an excellent plot and it kept me engrossed all the way through. I would highly recommend this book.

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