Although I reviewed Lee Goldberg’s Ashes Never Lie, it doesn’t hurt to see another viewpoint. Here’s Kevin Tipple’s review of the book.
Ashes Never Lie by Lee Goldberg picks up about a year after the events of Malibu
Burning. This second book in the series also works in Eve Ronin, and her partner,
Duncan Pavone. It is also a really good read.
Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department arson detectives Walter Sharpe and Andrew
Walker have pretty much finished at one fire scene where the fire crew is pulled off to go
fight a house fire in the nearby Twin Lakes housing development. The house is
unoccupied. There is also plenty of ground fuel, thanks to the weather. If firefighters
don’t stop the fire now, it could go through the housing development, get into the
bordering Santa Susanna Pass State Park and then take off for nearby Calabasas and
the Santa Monica Mountains. The last time the fire roared through the Santa Monica
Mountains, Sharpe and Wlaker barely escaped with their lives.
Sharpe, as senior investigator and still teaching Walker, insists they have to check out
the house fire. Walker doesn’t see much point, as they have not been called in to
investigate, but Sharpe wants to see it because fire guys flush away evidence and won’t
know if it is arson or not.
When they arrive, they find firefighters hard at work fighting a fire that has fully engulfed
the two-story home. The house is completely empty and yet is burning like crazy. Power
had only been turned on that morning and there were no workman inside or around it. In
fact, nobody had been working on it. The weather was fine as it was dry and clear. So,
the questions are—What caused the fire and what caused it to spread so fast and burn
so hot?
While the crew works, Sharpe and Walker look at a nearby home that is identical to the
one that is burning. Sharpe has some questions after the house tour, questions that are
reinforced when Captain Guyette tells him it must have been an electrical as there were
multiple ignition points also over the house next to the electric sockets, light switches,
and lighting. Sharpe isn’t buying it.
Not that he can investigate much right now, as he and Walker are suddenly pulled off to
go to a house fire in Calabasas where there is a body.
LASD Homicide Detective Eve Ronin and Duncan Pavone are also there and waiting for
them. The four gear up and go into the house. It is believed that Patrick Lopresti was
home alone and is the dead person in the fire. The question Eve wants to know is
where he got murdered, killed himself, or was committing arson and screwed up?
That question is soon answered in an unexpected way and becomes one of two
complicated storylines in the book. The first being the house fire scene they were
working before being pulled here.
Ashes Never Lie is the second book in the Sharpe and Walker series and a very
good read. Complicated and fast moving it roars along at a rapid pace to a satisfying
and explosive conclusion. In short, a fun read, and very much well worth your time.
My reading copy was a digital ARC from the publisher, Thomas & Mercer, by way of
NetGalley.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2024
Sounds interesting, thank you, Kevin.
‘Complicated and fast-moving…, who could resist? Congratulations to Lee on another outstanding review.