Shutter by Ramona Emerson

Summary

Rita Todacheene is a forensic photographer working for the Albuquerque police force. Her excellent photography skills have cracked many cases—she is almost supernaturally good at capturing details. In fact, Rita has been hiding a secret: she sees the ghosts of crime victims who point her toward the clues that other investigators overlook. 

As a lone portal back to the living for traumatized spirits, Rita is terrorized by nagging ghosts who won’t let her sleep and who sabotage her personal life. Her taboo and psychologically harrowing ability was what drove her away from the Navajo reservation, where she was raised by her grandmother. It has isolated her from friends and gotten her in trouble with the law.

And now it might be what gets her killed.

When Rita is sent to photograph the scene of a supposed suicide on a highway overpass, the furious, discombobulated ghost of the victim—who insists she was murdered—latches onto Rita, forcing her on a quest for revenge against her killers, and Rita finds herself in the crosshairs of one of Albuquerque’s most dangerous cartels. Written in sparkling, gruesome prose, Shutter is an explosive debut from one of crime fiction’s most powerful new voices

 
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Book Setting: New Mexico

  1. Chuska Mountains

  2. Hotel Albuquerque at Old Town

  3. Navajo Nation

  4. Tohatchi

  5. Gallup

  6. Saint Mary’s Catholic Church

  7. 3rd Street

  8. Coyote Canyon

  9. Chuska Apartments

  10. Chuska Lake

  11. Juniper Hills

  12. Mesita

  13. Earl’s Family Restaurant

  14. Ledoux

  15. Sunshine Theater

  16. Frontier Restaurant

Reviews

“A haunting thriller, written with exquisite suspense . . . This is a story that won’t let you go long after you finish, and you won’t want it to end even as you can’t stop reading to find out how it does.”

—Tommy Orange, author of There There

“This story is way more than a thriller, more than a ghost story. It is one of family and history, of culture, of past and present, of walking set boundaries and of discovering oneself.”

—USA Today

“This paranormal police procedural is unusual and multilayered, but what stands out is the gorgeously expressive and propulsive first-person storytelling, which is split between Rita’s present and her past. A former forensic photographer herself, the pictures Emerson paints with words are as vivid as they are brutal.”

—Oprah Daily