The conclusion of a trilogy that began with Bone’s Gift (2018).
It’s now December 1942, and the coal town of Big Vein, Virginia, is preparing for Christmas when the mine whistle blows, signaling disaster. This time, though, all the miners are safe and accounted for—but there’s a dead body in the mine, covered in rock dust, head crushed beyond recognition. When the corpse is discovered to be wearing a World War I dog tag that belonged to Bone’s uncle Ash, who’d left town a few weeks earlier, a black man named Tiny Sherman is arrested for his murder. Uncle Ash always forbade Bone to touch the two dog tags he wore, not wanting her psychic gifts to allow her to see the memories they contained, but now Uncle Junior asks her to. The memories she sees aren’t from Uncle Ash—whose are they? Bone seeks the truth while Mr. Hill, an African American attorney, works for Sherman’s release. Smibert packs a lot into the story, told, as always, in the third person from Bone’s perspective. Her characters—mostly white—and setting are fully evoked, and her language is both thoughtful and precise. The plot hinges on the presumption that the body is Uncle Ash’s, which doesn’t feel entirely believable—but the paranormal parts, including the appearance of a mysterious ghost dog, ring true. Smibert has a talent for ghost stories.
A satisfying conclusion to a worthy series.
(historical notes) (Historical/paranormal fiction. 8-14)