The Cold Way Home, Julia Keller
The Cold Way Home, Julia Keller
List: $42.99 | Sale: $30.10
Club: $21.49

The Cold Way Home
A Novel

Author: Julia Keller

Narrator: Shannon McManus

Unabridged: 10 hr 37 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 10/13/2020


Synopsis

"[An] emotion-charged mystery.... Keller's sleuths are easy to like and the murder story is moving; but the object of fascination here is Wellwood, a state-run mental institution with a dark history as a repository for 'rebellious, unruly women.'" ―The New York Times Book ReviewPulitzer Prize-winning author Julia Keller welcomes readers back to West Virginia, where her lyrical and moving stories of the people of her native state have unfolded since A Killing in the Hills, the acclaimed first novel in the series.Deep in the woods just outside Acker's Gap, West Virginia, rises a ragged chunk of what was once a high stone wall. This is all that remains of Wellwood, a psychiatric hospital for the poor that burned to the ground decades ago. And it is here that Bell Elkins – prosecutor turned private investigator – makes a grim discovery while searching for a missing teenager: A dead body, marred by a ghastly wound that can only mean murder.To solve the mystery of what happened in these woods where she played as a child, Bell and her partners – former sheriff Nick Fogelsong and former deputy Jake Oakes – must confront the tangled history of Wellwood and its dark legacy, while each grapples with a private torment. Based on a true chapter in the troubled history of early treatment for psychiatric illness, The Cold Way Home is a story of death and life, of despair and hope, of crime and – sometimes, but not always – punishment.

About Julia Keller

Julia Keller is the cultural critic at the Chicago Tribune and winner of the 2005 Pulitzer Prize for feature writing. She is a guest essayist on NewsHour with Jim Lehrer and has been a contributor on CNN and NBC Nightly News. She lives in Chicago, Illinois.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Mary Jackson on August 23, 2019

My first book by Keller. It is part of a series I am told but it reads as a stand alone. Not for the fact that it takes place in West Virginia or that the author is from Ohio. This book took me on a ride and I loved every minute of it. I can't wait to get my hands on more of her books. The Mary Reade......more

Goodreads review by Chris on September 05, 2019

Wow. Keller managed to take another deeply depressing facet of life in Acker’s Gap, resolve a confusing mystery and still leave a sense of optimism for the reader and for Bell and her friends.......more

Goodreads review by Bookreporter.com on August 31, 2019

I have developed an affinity for Julia Keller’s Bell Elkins series. Acker’s Gap exists in that foggy neverland between fiction and reality, modeled after a real-world small town on the outskirts of Huntington, West Virginia, which has been assimilated into its big brother’s city limits but continues......more

Goodreads review by Susan on September 01, 2019

I'm a big fan of the Bell Elkins series. It features intriguing characters, a colorful setting, and compelling mysteries. This newest installment is no exception. It was fun to see Bell acting in her new capacity as a private investigator, along with Jake Oakes and Nick Fogelsong. We get a few glimp......more

Goodreads review by Anne on August 25, 2019

I received this book from St. Martins Press in return for my honest review: I had no idea going into to this book that it was part of a series. With that being said it was great as a stand alone. I didn't feel as if I was missing information by not reading the first 7 books. I actually want to work b......more


Quotes

“A gritty tale of despair, family pride, hope, and second chances.” —Kirkus Reviews“Keller's Bell Elkins series sets a standard for its evocation of place and for the sensitive portrayals of its characters, with Bell the most masterfully drawn of all. This is introspective, literary crime fiction at its best.” — Booklist (starred review)“This is a strong addition to the series that can easily be read as a standalone.” —Publishers Weekly