Come for the breathtaking Alaskan wilderness. Stay for the sixteen-year-old corpse with an ax in its chest.
I'm slowly working my way through my 50 States Reading Challenge, and Northern Lights lets me cross Alaska off the list.
Chief of Police Nate Burke has left Baltimore after losing just about everything. Hoping for a fresh start, he accepts the police chief position in Lunacy, Alaska, where the locals (yes, called Lunatics) have a betting pool on how long the newcomer from the Lower 48 will last through an Alaskan winter. They aren't exactly rolling out the welcome mat.
Then three young men decide it's a brilliant idea to climb a mountain called No Name in the middle of winter. Because apparently taking chances, frostbite, avalanches, and hypothermia are necessary badges of honor. After six days, they're finally rescued from a cave...along with a sixteen-year-old corpse sporting an ax squarely in its chest.
Now that's how you get my attention.
The discovery reopens a long-buried mystery that spirals into murder, attempted murder, secrets, and plenty of deception. I found myself far more invested in solving the sixteen-year-old murder than in the romance. As usual with Nora Roberts, I skipped over the steamier scenes, but they were easy enough to bypass without losing the thread of the story.
The real star of the book, though, was Alaska. The endless darkness, brutal cold, breathtaking Northern Lights, and tight-knit community gave the story an atmosphere you just couldn't get anywhere else. Nora Roberts writes scenic descriptions so well I could see it in my mind in living color. Lunacy felt like its own character, full of quirky residents who know everyone's business and always seem to have an opinion about it.
The mystery kept me guessing, the setting kept me fascinated, and I genuinely wanted to know how all the pieces fit together. If you're looking for a romantic suspense where the mystery is every bit as compelling as the relationship, Northern Lights is well worth the trip north.





















