Here’s the blurb
Alex knows she risks getting fired from her law firm if she takes on another unpaid case, but when she hears Rosa’s desperate voice at the other end of the phone, she knows she has to help: the body of Rosa’s shy teenage sister, Natalia, has been dragged, lifeless, from the Thames. Alex can’t help but think of her own missing little sister. She knows how a lack of answers can eat you alive.
Kat has worked hard to become Special Adviser to the Home Secretary, and is eager to finally put the dark and tragic part of her past behind her. But when she discovers a series of cover-ups, she begins to wonder whether her seemingly perfect new boss could be involved. Then she she’s shocked to discover a letter that raises worrying questions about a girl found drowned in London… Natalia.
There are complex and painful reasons for Alex and Kat not to work together, but when it becomes clear that there are powerful people involved in Natalia’s death, and that other girls are at risk, Alex and Kat must overcome their differences to find answers. Will they save the girls and discover the truth? Or will the high-powered players in this game stop Alex and Kat for good?
My Review
Notes on a Drowning is an engaging and very well-plotted story about two women with an awkward shared past who work together to prevent a similar tragedy to the one that first brought them together.
The beginning of the book is a little slower than the ending, as the reader begins to piece together the narrative of the two women, who have complicated lives without the addition of the mystery that reunites them. The mystery itself is complex and grows increasingly dangerous for them. Who can they trust, aside from no one but a very few?
This is a tale of corruption and power and how corrupting such power can be. It is also very current, contending with the persistent ‘boys club’ mentality that infects politics and the terrible underbelly that goes with it.
Yet, it is also a fast-paced and well-executed read. I devoured it in two sittings.
This is not my usual read. I’m a bit more ‘thriller’ minded and also more historical or cosy crime, but this is a timely tale of corruption and politics, unputdownable until the last page.
(Anna Sharpe also writes historical fiction as Anna Mazolla. I recently read The House of Whispers and thoroughly enjoyed it.)
Purchase Link
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Notes-Drowning-Anna-Sharpe-ebook/dp/B0D67B33XB/

