Rating: 4/5
Review:
Some good aspects, some serious implausibility
I enjoyed a lot about One Step Too Far, but in places it strained
credibility just a little too far itself.
The story is
narrated by Frankie Elkin, rather a rootless, lost soul and
recovering alcoholic, who travels around trying to locate people who
have been missing for a long time. She appears to be doing this to
escape from her own demons, although she repeatedly asks herself “Why
do I do this?” without managing an answer. For her trouble she
gets paid nothing, it seems, so she’s poorly equipped to join an
expedition to try to find Tim, a young man who disappeared five years
ago on his pre-wedding trip with his friends into the Wyoming
wilderness. Tim’s father has organised these trips annually and
the group of friends, riven with guilt, join in along with two more
experienced wilderness explorers plus a cadaver dog and her handler.
The beginning is
very well done, even if the group’s acceptance of Frankie is pretty
unlikely. The preparations and development of a serious hike into
the wilderness are interesting and absorbing, and the dynamics in the
group are interesting and very plausibly developed. As things –
inevitably – turn more sinister, plausibility begins to recede
somewhat, but for some time it’s well within the bounds of
suspension of disbelief. I have to say, though, that it did become
pretty silly toward the end. Lisa Gardner’s writing is very good,
so the tension and exhaustion of being stranded in the wilderness
while apparently being hunted is very well portrayed, but some of the
events themselves strained my credulity well beyond its elastic
limit. The Big Reveal was also, shall we say, unlikely in the
extreme, both in the revelation itself and the manner in which it
happens, so the later parts of the book took some of the shine off
the very good opening for me.
Overall, this
remains a four-star book because Gardner’s characterisation, sense
of place and so on are good enough to compensate for much (but not
all) of the later plot implausibilities. Certainly a decent holiday
read, and with enough here to encourage me to try the next in the
series.
(My thanks to Random
House for an ARC vis NetGalley.)