Ratings1
Average rating5
In the small town of Hart's Ridge, danger is never far away, as Deputy Taylor Gray knows all too well. Even as she hopes for a respite after a recent wave of crime, a stranger arrives in town and threatens the safety of one of its residents. With her instincts honed by years of law enforcement experience, Taylor jumps into action to protect one of their own.
But as Taylor works to uncover the truth behind the stranger's motives, her sister Jo faces a different kind of challenge. As a single mother who has always shouldered her problems alone, Jo is cautiously optimistic about the future as her family finally seems to be finding stability. But as secrets come to light and tensions rise in the town, she begins to wonder if her newfound hope will be short-lived.
With Kay Bratt's signature blend of suspense and heart, Instant Karma is a thrilling addition to the Hart's Ridge small-town mystery series. As the Gray family and their community face new challenges and unexpected twists, readers will be hooked until the very end.
Series
10 primary booksHart's Ridge is a 10-book series with 10 primary works first released in 2022 with contributions by Kay Bratt. The next book is scheduled for release on 12/25/2024.
Reviews with the most likes.
Excellent Mid-Series Wrap Up And Soft Reboot. This book is exactly what the title says - an excellent epilogue to the series as it has been, and a soft reboot for what is to come. The story to this point, as much as it has been about Hart's Ridge, has also been about the one family, and here we see (most) of their initial travails handled and handled well. Meanwhile, a dark secret emerges that will seemingly drive at least the next book and, depending on how Bratt chooses to play this, could well drive the back half of this planned eight book series. This is also one of the creepiest, and yet even more real because of it, books, with the crime here not being rape or murder or torture or some such, but scams and elder abuse - another facet of life that is seemingly all too common these days in the "real" world, and one which Bratt manages to work into her town and series quite well indeed. And as a bonus, as a "soft reboot" of the series... this is actually a decent entry point for those who have not read the prior books and yet don't mind events from them being discussed within this book. Overall a well told story in a well developed small town in real-enough North Georgia Mountain country, and I'm very much looking forward to seeing where Bratt takes this next. Very much recommended.
Originally posted at bookanon.com.