cover image Second Skin

Second Skin

Michael Wiley. Severn, $29.95 (224p) ISBN 978-0-7278-8534-0

As Wiley explains in an author's note to his unconventional second Daniel Turner noir (after 2014's Blue Avenue), the Florida homicide detective always plays a supporting character, "the common element in others' lives and deaths, getting caught in the spirals of crime that he investigates." This time, the main players are Daniel's sister, Lillian, an English teacher, and her husband, Johnny Bellefleur, a skiptracer permanently scarred by his memories of his time dealing with dead bodies as an Army corpsman. Lillian takes a special interest in one of her students, 19-year-old Sheneel Greene, and is devastated when the young woman's partially decomposed body is found near a clay pit. Sheneel, who had a history of suicide attempts, is believed to have taken her own life. Johnny finds proof of foul play when he comes across Sheneel's arm, cleanly severed from the rest of her body. Wiley tosses several surprises in along the way to the tense conclusion. The book's strength lies in its insights into the well-developed characters, enhanced by alternating first-person narratives. Agent: Philip Spitzer, Philip G. Spitzer Literary Agency. (Dec.)