The Art and Adventure of Leadership: Understanding Failure, Resilience and Success
Warren Bennis, Steven B. Sample and Rob Asghar
Book
For the first time, a top leadership scholar and a top leadership practitioner explore the true...
The Art of Authenticity: Tools to Become an Authentic Leader and Your Best Self
Book
Leverage your authentic self into a valuable leadership strategy The Art of Authenticity is a guide...
The Secrets of Big Business Innovation: An Insider's Guide to Delivering Innovation, Change and Growth
Book
Innovation is all around us every day; every product we use, every piece of packaging we open, every...
Practical Information Security Management: A Complete Guide to Planning and Implementation
Book
Create appropriate, security-focused business propositions that consider the balance between cost,...
Architect's Guide to Writing: For Design and Construction Professionals
Book
A one-stop shop for architects and other design professionals to improve their writing skills. There...
Speaking the Speech
Book
Why does Shakespeare write in the way he does? And how can actors and directors get the most out of...
Rocket Fuel: Power-Packed Food for Sports and Adventure
Book
In Rocket Fuel, award-winning dietitian Matt Kadey offers up delicious, creative, and convenient...
The Oxford Handbook of Dance and Politics
Randy Martin, Rebekah J. Kowal and Gerald Siegmund
Book
In recent decades, dance has become a vehicle for querying assumptions about what it means to be...
Before You Hit Send: Preventing Headache and Heartache
Book
When will we learn? With every sunrise we are given plenty of new examples of people "Hitting Send"...
ClareR (6106 KP) rated The Searcher in Books
Nov 15, 2020
As in most small villages, word of a new, exotic inhabitant spreads fast, and this is why Trey turns up on Cal’s doorstep. He wants Cal to help him find his older brother, Brendan, who has disappeared. The local police seem to be completely disinterested - mainly due to the family’s reputation. It seems to be no surprise to people that Trey’s 19 year old brother would want to leave the small village. With the family’s reputation being that of ‘wasters’ who live on the poverty line (or probably below it), it strikes people as unremarkable that he would leave to try and make his life better elsewhere. But Trey doesn’t believe this. He believes that he has been kidnapped, and he wants Cal to find him. The problem is that Cal just doesn’t want to get involved. He has left the Chicago police force because of the frustration he feels at not making a difference. And this decency is what ends up drawing him in to helping Trey.
It did surprise me that Cal becomes involved with Trey, and he clearly realises that such a relationship could be seen as problematic. He makes the effort to keep Trey’s presence a secret from his nosy neighbour, Mart. The fact that everyone seemed to know everyone else’s business did create a claustrophobic atmosphere, almost a touch of horror especially as the book progresses.
This also touches on some of the current issues in the USA surrounding policing and BLM protests, so it does make this a very current novel. I have to say though, that the end of the book came as a complete surprise to me, and left me feeling ultimately disappointed in the characters. It didn’t make me like the book any less though!
Many thanks to Penguin UK and NetGalley for my copy of this book to read and review.

