Book Review: I Could Be You by Sheila Bugler

I Could Be You by Sheila Bugler is a taut thriller that is not only good because of the storyline but is different than many others because of the heroine- an investigative journalist.

The book opens with her, Dee Doran, finding a dead woman who has been hit by a car, lying on the road outside her home. The dead woman is her tenant Katie but her two-year-old son Jake can't be found though his upturned buggy is also lying around twisted and bent near to Katie. Fearing the worst, Dee being her search for the child. After the matter is taken up by the local police, Dee realises that the woman that she had identified as her tenant Katie is someone else and Katie had been living under someone else's identify. Gradually Dee's journalistic instincts that have been lying dormant for a while since she quit active journalism to come back to her childhood home to look after her ailing mother, kick in ferociously. She begins to look at various leads in an attempt to find out the woman who has lived as her tenant and the little boy who had become so important to Dee.

There are other characters that contribute to the story, adding life and intrigue to the plot and the book
 (written in third person often) shuffles between past and present. How Dee uncovers the bits and pieces from Katie's past and the story that gradually emerges is really interesting and Bugle uses her understanding of the human psychology (she studied it) to keep the reader on the edge through the story.

I loved almost everything about the book largely but towards the end found it to be a bit repetitive. Pick it up if you are looking for something that will keep you intrigued and a cast of characters that come in every size and shape.

Thank you Net Galley and the publishers Canelo for the ebook.


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