Hunter had told her once, and Reggie understood what she meant, as would that one other person who knew about Dr. “Justice has nothing to do with the law,” Dr. Hunter had murdered two men with her bare hands (literally) and only Reggie and one other person knew about it. Hunter had been the nicest, kindest, most sympathetic person that Reggie had ever known, and Reggie knew for a fact that Dr. But Reggie soon finds herself in the sort of quandary that no police officer wants to be in, even those with pasts and associations as checkered as her own:ĭr. When their investigations cross paths with a very recent murder, it looks like they might finally escape this circle of bureaucratic hell. It should be just a matter of crossing t’s and dotting i’s in the course of routine conversations, but the duo keeps running into figurative stone walls as the subjects of their inquiries tend to never be available. Reggie and her partner, DC Ronnie Debicki, have been tasked with tying up loose ends from an old case involving a ring of pedophiles in Yorkshire. It’s been nine long years, but welcome back, Jackson Brodie! And, even more importantly to me, welcome back, Reggie Chase, who is all grown up and now a detective constable after completing her degree in Law and Criminology. Iconoclastic detective Jackson Brodie returns in Kate Atkinson’s long-awaited fifth book in the series, Big Sky, a triumphant new novel about secrets, sex, and lies.
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