Cover Image: Skin Deep

Skin Deep

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Member Reviews

The lead character is lovely, complicated and interesting.

However, while I was interested in the storyline in the beginning, I found myself increasingly skimming the detail. I didn’t enjoy the language and was uncomfortable with the conclusion. Not my cup of tea.

With thanks to #NetGalley, Polis Books and the author for my free advanced reader copy to review in exchange for an honest opinion.

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A Korean-American female detective with the unexpected name of Siobhan O'Brien is a good enough hook to draw your attention to this new book. Siobhan, a forty-something former reporter, has just completed her PI apprenticeship when her mentor dies and leaves her the agency. When a former roommate asks her to find her missing daughter, Siobhan has her first solo case that takes her from the halls of the recently-coed former women's college to a yoga retreat, while tentatively exploring a relationship with the attorney down the hall. Great fun to read and looking forward to more adventures with Siobhan.

Thanks to Polis Books and NetGalley for access to a digital ARC.

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A Korean-American PI with an Irish name makes for a good start for a mystery series. It also gives her the task of responding to everyone who asks about her name as it jars with their perception of what her name should be. I love that the author has given her main character an opportunity to speak about her ethnicity this way. A good story, some multicultural reflection, and smooth writing. What's not to like? I look forward to reading more of what I hope will be a robust series!

Thank you to NetGalley for providing me with this advance read.

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This is a first book in a new PI series about Korean-American adoptee Siobhan O’Brien. She’s middle age and expectedly inherits the PI business where she has been working. A friend from the past arrives asking for help. We’re then drawn into the world of higher learning, the über rich, beauty, science, and yoga. Wondering how it all connects? It does!

I enjoyed this. I felt it was part PI story and part cozy mystery (without the murder). I’m not a fan of the gritty PI novel and this is not that. I thought it was funny and intriguing. It drew me and kept me reading so I could find out what happens next. My fingers are crossed for several return characters!

I am ready for the next Siobhan O’Brien mystery!

Thanks to Netgalley and Polis Books for this free copy in exchange for my honest review.

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I received this ARC via Netgalley and Polis/Agora Books, in return for an honest review. This is the first book in what, I hope, will be a long-running series about fortyish private investigator (PI), Siobhan (Sha-vaughn) O’Brien. While her birth family was Korean, Siobhan was adopted by an Irish father and Norwegian mother, so a recurring theme is people finding out her name and double-checking her face. This is not a traditional murder mystery but a missing person case that Siobhan undertakes. It’s her first case since the unexpected death of her boss and mentor, who left her his PI business. Siobhan goes onto the local college campus, last known location of her old friend’s freshman daughter, to find out what happened. Events take her to a yogic retreat, into NYC, and back to college again. Throughout all of these, the author does an excellent job of setting the people and the characters. Siobhan is written with quirks and humanity, as are the characters around her. She makes friends, enemies, a possible love interest. The setting and use of multiracial characters also make this a very strong story. The ending indicates that, at least, we’ll have the pleasure of seeing a second book about Siobhan and I can’t wait to see what happens next!

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What first attracted me to this book was the cover. Interesting font, color, and title, plus I was in the mood for a mystery. I was thrilled to receive an advanced copy of Skin Deep.

Siobhan O'Brien is a transracial adoptee, Korean adopted by an Irish father and Norwegian mother, who is mourning the loss of her boss and mentor and deciding whether or not to shut down the PI business that he left to her. When an old friend comes to her for help locating her daughter, Siobhan dives into a collegiate mystery with unexpected outcomes.

This book surprised me. I was a little wary of the college setting because sliding into the world of fraternities and dorm life can read a little young. However, Siobhan's approach to investigating the daughter brought her into contact with a wide array of characters, which brought a fresh mix and propulsive pacing to the narrative. The missing daughter becomes more of a part of a whole to the mystery, however, as Siobhan's philosophy is to gather as much information as possible because you never know what's going to be useful. I loved this about her, and as a narrator, I enjoyed her voice and interactions with others. Funny, smart, self-aware, and human; she doesn't get everything right on her first try, and she's doing her best to navigate the grief of losing someone close to her and her place in the agency without him.

More than the lighthearted tone, Siobhan's character is an interesting examination of identity. Countless times she feels obligated to explain the discrepancy between her Korean appearance and her Irish name. Naming is powerful, and throughout the casual jokes, weird looks, and offhand commentary, Woo is making a shrewd observation about the correlation between who our names tell us to be, how we see ourselves, and how others perceive us, as well. Several seemingly innocuous interactions left me pondering perception. For example, I'm not Asian, but I related to Siobhan's discussion with Craig about his weight. She asks him "how he got so big" and instead of being offended, he talks about his genetics, biological tendencies, and eating habits, all of which I realized is exactly how Siobhan's character handles the questions of her ethnicity. Oftentimes, we don't realize how invasive certain questions can be; we're used to instant gratification, information available at the touch of a button, and to a certain extent, a culture of feeling entitled to know everything about everyone.

Additionally, I found the astute commentary on beauty served as a foundation to this argument. Where beauty is often dismissed as a luxury, Siobhan's investigation forces us to question our own beauty standards and perceptions, the power behind conventional beauty, and who defines what is beautiful. It's a study in age, gender, youth, and identity, all wrapped in a beautiful, mysterious bow.

So while on its surface, there's a rather fun mystery, Skin Deep proves it is so much more than that, and I look forward to seeing where Woo takes this character and the series. I'd recommend this read to anyone looking for a fun, fast-paced mystery with relevant themes.

Big thanks to Polis/Agora and NetGalley for providing an eARC in exchange for honest review consideration.

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