'The Deep, Deep Snow' review: In search of a missing boy

A young boy goes missing in Brian Freeman's "The Deep, Deep Snow." Credit: TNS/Blackstone Publishing
THE DEEP, DEEP SNOW by Brian Freeman (Blackstone Publishing, 354 pp., $16.99)
Things are usually pretty quiet in the small forested town of Avery Weir, a place so hidden away that most folks call it Everywhere, in the middle of nowhere.
Our narrator is Shelby Lake, a young woman who was left on the sheriff's doorstep as an infant. Now 25 and a deputy, Shelby is trading banter with her co-workers when the sheriff gets a call: A 10-year-old boy is missing.
The only sign Jeremiah Sloan has left behind is his bike on the side of a forest road. As the search intensifies, we meet a townful of characters, each of whom is hiding a secret.Even with the FBI's help, there is no sign of Jeremiah. Suspicion lands on a number of people, but the case goes cold over the coming months. The boy's heartbroken family falls apart. Then, 10 years later, there is a break. Someone has found one of Jeremiah's possessions in a most unlikely place, and the mystery ramps right back up to the incredible pace where it left off. The ties between these characters are deep, because no one leaves Everywhere for long, and each has a part in this complicated plot.
The sheriff is fighting advancing Alzheimer's, Shelby keeps seeing omens of snowy owls leading to turns in the case, and a young woman now in Shelby's care is going through a perilous spell with drugs and alcohol.
Even with the heavy subject matter, this book is a delight to read. The dialogue is crisp and natural. The storytelling seems unflawed, with the tiniest of breadcrumbs from one chapter suddenly resurfacing and making their purpose known.
"The Deep, Deep Snow" is one to share with friends, to recommend for book clubs or to stash away for a second reading down the road.
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