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Late October in the Pacific Northwest foothills brings more than a change of season. Psychiatric evaluator Grace Vaccaro is on edge. A field evaluation gone wrong leads to a shooting, Grace's mother has died and ghosts from her family past are everywhere. When Laurel, a young psychiatric patient, says she killed her therapist, Grace suspects it's a delusion and sets out to prove her innocent. Then Laurel escapes from a locked unit and suspicions abound. Her parents have secrets too. Laurel is reuniting with her father, a recovering heroin addict. Just how much does he oppose mental health…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Late October in the Pacific Northwest foothills brings more than a change of season. Psychiatric evaluator Grace Vaccaro is on edge. A field evaluation gone wrong leads to a shooting, Grace's mother has died and ghosts from her family past are everywhere. When Laurel, a young psychiatric patient, says she killed her therapist, Grace suspects it's a delusion and sets out to prove her innocent. Then Laurel escapes from a locked unit and suspicions abound. Her parents have secrets too. Laurel is reuniting with her father, a recovering heroin addict. Just how much does he oppose mental health treatment and why? Laurel's mother doesn't trust him. The mother may have a disturbing past of her own-someone is following her. Grace's work partner disappears next. Is it related to the case? Grace's search leads to the Seattle music scene, an abandoned mental hospital in the North Cascades and a group of cloistered nuns on a remote island. Whenever Grace believes she's identified the killer, new information points to someone else. As Grace digs deeper, she must face both the hope and inadequacies of medical treatment of mental health in the last sixty years.
Autorenporträt
Martha Crites has worked in both community and inpatient mental health for many years and taught at the Quileute Tribal School on the Washington coast. When she isn't working and writing, you will find her working in her garden or walking and volunteering on the Camino de Santiago, the medieval pilgrimage trail in Spain. Her first novel, Grave Disturbance, was a finalist for the Pacific Northwest Writers Association's Nancy Pearl Award. Her short work has been featured in the anthology, Camino de Santiago: a spiritual companion (Redemptorist Publications). She lives with her husband and her somewhat wild Labrador retriever in Seattle, Washington. Martha is a member of Mystery Writes of America and Sisters in Crime.