blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: The Ice Angels – Caroline Mitchell

A deadly pattern: Jenny Flynn, Chelsea Hobbs, Sophie Miller. All three children were snatched from the streets of Lincoln, England years apart. All stolen in the bitter chill of winter. All on their way home from school. Then Sophie Miller is found. She’s not speaking, but she may hold a clue to the whereabouts of the missing girls, if someone can get her to open up.

Somewhat reluctantly, Detective Swann calls in his not-quite ex-wife, the perfect woman for the job: Finnish Crime Inspector Elea Baker. No one knows the cases of the Ice Angels better than Elea, and no one is more invested in solving them. Ten years ago, Elea’s daughter Liisa was taken under similar circumstances, from Helsinki, and Elea has never believed her daughter is dead.

Alternating between Elea and Liisa’s perspectives, The Ice Angels is a propulsive and twisty crime novel of spine-chilling quality, exploring the darkest and most twisted of minds. The isolation and cold of the English and Finnish landscapes permeate the book, immersing the reader in Elea’s world as she desperately searches for the connection between the missing girls, clinging to the hope she can bring her own home.

Caroline Mitchell is a New York Times, USA Today, Washington Post, and international #1ebookbestselling author. A former police detective, she originates from Ireland and now lives in a woodland village outside the city of Lincoln, England. Her backlist has been translated into fourteen languages.

My thoughts: I really liked this, it was intelligent and gripping. Moving between the two cases, the first in Finland, then the current English one. We also see it through the perspective of one of the missing girls in Finland, which was horrifying, so creepy.

As the detectives in England search for Chelsea, with the limited help of Sophie – who is still traumatised and unable to tell them much, Elea is still determined that her daughter, Liisa, the last missing Finnish girl, is alive and out there somewhere. It affects her judgement and behaviour, putting her participation in the case at risk, and causes further issues in her relationship with Swann – in charge of the case, and her ex-husband.

The case is complex, not least because of its geographic shift, but also in the relationships between the detectives, and whether or not Elea is helping or hindering, she’s so close to it and possibly too much so. Victims’ parents aren’t usually allowed so much access. But her commitment might also help solve this case at last.

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in this blog tour, but all opinions remain my own.

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