Two gripping storylines… and one that was unnecessary.
I just finished Little Child Gone by Stacy Green, and this lands solidly at four stars on my slightly snarky rating system. I didn’t lose sleep over it, but it was a strong, steady thriller that kept me engaged the whole way through with two standout storylines and one that… didn’t quite earn its keep.
The story weaves together multiple threads, which is always a bit of a gamble. Here, we have three: the discovery of two skeletons in a farmhouse being renovated, the disappearance of Taylor Hall, and a separate case involving a missing teenager named Eli Robertson.
Let’s start with what worked, because when this book works, it really works.
The farmhouse skeletons and Taylor’s disappearance are beautifully done. There’s a slow unraveling of the past that ties into the present in a way that feels both natural and surprising. I had my suspicions early on that the family from the prologue was connected to the farmhouse, but the way that thread ultimately ties into Taylor’s case caught me off guard. It’s one of those reveals where you immediately want to flip back and see what you missed.
And the setting absolutely delivers that small-town thriller vibe. Everything takes place in Stillwater, Minnesota, a place where secrets don’t stay buried nearly as well as people think they do. It adds that underlying tension of “someone here knows more than they’re saying,” which always works for me.
Now… Eli.
Eli’s storyline is where things get a little murky. Yes, he’s missing. Yes, he’s eventually found. But compared to the other two plotlines, his story feels underdeveloped and, honestly, a bit unnecessary. It doesn’t carry the same emotional weight or narrative importance, and it never fully weaves into the main story in a satisfying way. It’s not bad; it just feels like it belongs in a slightly different book.
That said, Nikki Hunt holds everything together. I liked her immediately. She’s a strong female lead without being over-the-top about it: capable, empathetic, and refreshingly human. No dramatic perfection, no exaggerated flaws, just someone doing her job and doing it well.
Overall, this is one of those thrillers that doesn’t try to reinvent the genre but executes it really well where it counts. Two of the three storylines are compelling, layered, and worth the ride. Unfortunately, the third just didn’t quite keep up.
Four stars for a good, solid read, the kind that keeps you turning pages, even if it doesn’t quite keep you up at night.



















