Brimstone Hollow
An Annie Gore Novel
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- Vorbestellbar
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- Erwartet am 11. Aug. 2026
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- 12,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
Following her powerful debut in The Witch’s Orchard, private investigator Annie Gore returns in Brimstone Hollow, bringing readers back to the mountains that author Archer Sullivan, a ninth-generation Appalachian, knows so well.
There isn’t much that happens in the Appalachian Mountains that Private Investigator Annie Gore hasn’t seen. Before she was an Air Force Special Investigator, she was born and raised in those rolling hills, and lately Annie's cases have called her away from her Louisville office and closer to the small towns of her youth than she ever anticipated. But when her newest client asks if she’s ever been to a snake-handling church, Annie knows she’s about to enter unknown territory.
Katie May has been estranged from her father—one of Appalachia’s last infamous snake handling preachers—for twenty years. But when Katie finds out he’s been fatally bitten, and a funeral was held within twenty-four hours, she questions whether someone deliberately rushed the process. Despite Annie’s doubts, she takes the case. After all, when she looks at Katie, she sees a version of herself: a girl who needs to understand her father in order to understand herself.
As she navigates the hidden hollers and dangerous secrets of this insular Eastern Kentucky town, Annie works fast, hoping to find the truth in record time for her client—and before too many memories from her own childhood surface. But it soon becomes apparent that someone wants Annie’s investigation to stop—by any means necessary.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Sullivan's atmospheric sequel to The Witch's Orchard sees Appalachian PI Annie Gore return home for a complicated murder investigation. Annie's newest client, Katie May, hires her to look into the death of her estranged biological father, Ezra King, a snake-handling preacher in Mount Zion, Ky. Ezra's death is officially attributed to multiple snakebites, but Katie suspects a cover-up, disturbed by the absence of an autopsy and the speed with which Ezra was buried. Though Annie doubts she'll find a reason to contradict the coroner's conclusions, she empathizes with Katie's fraught family dynamics and agrees to return to Mount Zion to look into the matter. Police chief Matthew Dishman is cooperative, but the more Annie pokes around, the more questions emerge about Ezra's death. Meanwhile, a string of strange, smaller crimes accompany her investigation. Sullivan gives even minor characters depth and dimension, but she spends most of her time developing Annie, a gritty, determined lead whose inquiry inevitably digs up ghosts from her past. With shrewd twists and a convincing attunement to the rhythms of rural life, this proves the series deserves a long life. Fans of Greg Iles's regional mysteries will love it.