Review: Road Kill by R. J. Norgard

Review: Road Kill by R. J. Norgard

Road Kill by R. J. Norgard
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Description (from Amazon.com)

“When he turned they were almost on top of him – two orbs of blinding white light, racing toward him like craven monsters…”

In Road Kill, the second installment in the Sidney Reed Mystery Series, Alaska P.I. Sidney Reed is still haunted by the memory of his late wife Molly, even as his doubts about her alleged suicide grow. Still smarting from the loss of his beloved Subaru to a huge bull moose, Sidney is lured away from his dingy apartment above an Anchorage coffee shop by his friend, renowned Alaska attorney Eddie Baker, who persuades Sid to help him defend a drug-addicted snowplow operator accused of the hit-and-run death of Willie Olson, the son of a prominent indigenous community leader. With the trial dominating the headlines and the Alaska Native community on edge, tensions are running sky-high, but Eddie assures Sid that he is only there to provide routine trial support. But as the road-weary P.I. delves into the case, he begins to doubt his client’s guilt. These suspicions are reinforced when a key witness surfaces whose testimony could blow the case wide open. Suddenly, Sidney and his witness find themselves in the crosshairs of malevolent forces hell-bent on seeing to it that Baker’s client is convicted. Complicating matters is Sid’s growing relationship with Maria, the beautiful and mysterious newspaper reporter covering the trial. She’s determined to help Sid, but can he trust her? With the lives of his client and witness hanging in the balance, Sidney is determined to make things right, and nothing – not drug dealers, dirty cops, or the bitter Alaska cold – is going to stop him.


5 stars

My Thoughts

I lived in a Alaska long ago, and the state still contains my happy place. So, when I first picked up Road Kill by R. J. Norgard, I was pleasantly surprised to find it was set in and around Anchorage. While I did not live in that fair city, I did spend some time there getting ready to move on to my final destination. This was important as it was the setting, the weather, the people and all the little quirks of living in the Final Frontier that I believe solidified this excellent mystery novel as a 5-star gem in my mind.

Road Kill is the second in The Sidney Reed Mystery series. I did not read the first yet, but I was able to jump right in. Norgard sets the tone perfectly and helps us like the main character early, establishing both who he is, why he is, and what motivates him. Sidney Reed is a Private Investigator still troubled by the death of his wife. He is hired by an attorney to help with a seemingly solid hit-and-run case resulting in the death of Willie Olson, the son of a indigenous community leader. What seems obvious is anything but. This is a solid mystery that does not lend itself to an early solution.

Tensions mount throughout the story both in the case and in Sidney’s life. The weather and descriptions of the cold certainly helped in that arena, an element of story writing that I truly enjoy. There were enough twists and turns to keep me turning pages and just enough drops of information to keep me intrigued about what happened to Sidney’s wife. The writing is crisp and at times reminded me of the noir mysteries of old with quick pacing and a satisfying conclusion.

R. J. Norgard has convinced me to pick up the first installment of The Sidney Reed Mystery series (Trophy Kill) and wait with hopeful anticipation for the third. Road Kill was an excellent book, and one that I highly recommend for mystery fans and anyone curious about life in the Final Frontier.

Available at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09PQK8R7N/


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