Book Review This wild wild country

This wild, wild country by Inga Vesper

About the book

Three women. An isolated town. A decades-old mystery.

1933. Cornelia Stover is not the kind of woman the men of Boldville, New Mexico, expect her to be. But, one day, she stumbles upon a secret hidden out in the hills . . .

1970. Decades later, Joanna Riley, a former cop, packs up her car in the middle of the night and drives west, fleeing an abusive marriage and a life she can no longer bear. Eventually, she runs out of gas and finds herself in Boldville, a sleepy desert town in the foothills of the Gila Mountains.

Joanna was looking for somewhere to hide, but something is off about this place. In a commune on the outskirts a young man has been found dead and Joanna knows a cover up when she sees it. Soon, she and Glitter, a young, disaffected hippie, find themselves caught up in a dark mystery that goes to the very heart of Boldville. A mystery that leads them all the way back to the unexplained disappearance of Glitter’s grandmother Cornelia forty years before . . .

Comments

We all found this book difficult to read. The story moves backwards and forwards in time, the multiple storylines are miserable and confusing. There are numerous characters whose lives and stories are based on murders, gold rush fever, 1970s hippy communes, drugs, bikie gangs, misogyny, wife abuse, secrets, lies and deceit.

There were too many unlikeable characters and themes to make this an enjoyable read.

Read by Dundas Readers – Rating 2/10