Reviews for Missing Sister

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
When people who inflict violence get away with it, does murder become justice—and justified? Penny Albright is just a few shifts away from completing her training as a cop in Kennesaw, Georgia, when she pulls her first murder scene. She’s shocked to realize she knows the victim: Danny Bowery, one of three men who raped her twin sister, Nix, several years ago, sending her into a spiral that ended in her eventual death by overdose. In a nearby alley, Penny finds a woman covered in blood. Penny doesn’t arrest the woman, Thalia Gray, even though Penny knows Thalia is “a stone-cold killer”; she confiscates Thalia’s knife and lets her get away. Hiding the weapon, and now complicit, Penny can’t stop thinking about Thalia even as her own family drama clamors for attention. Penny’s teenage niece, Shadow, has been suspended from school for hacking, and her wandering influencer brother, Shadow’s father, Gand, arrives in his converted school bus—but for how long? Then Nix’s ex-boyfriend, Michael Sullivan, reaches out, having heard about the murder. Penny knows the man Thalia murdered was not the first of Nix’s attackers to die; Xav Castillo was killed right around the second anniversary of Nix’s death. Did Thalia know Nix? Is she on a revenge tour for Penny’s sister—or does Thalia have a sister story of her own? Is the third attacker now in danger? Caught up in fear and admiration for Thalia, Penny is willing to sacrifice her budding career to find out the truth about this woman and perhaps even help her. For Penny, “life [is] made almost entirely out of stories about sisters,” and this is indeed a sister story—about how far into the flames they will walk for one another and about how this love burns fiercely, even after death. Jackson’s mystery is tight and breathless, but it’s the characters who shine, especially smart, loyal, wounded Penny, but also her cast of supporting family members, her tough but fair mentor, and steel-eyed Thalia. A finely wrought, character-driven thriller with a propulsive and satisfying climax. Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
