
No Good Deed by Katherine Kovacic
3/31/26; 336 pages
Poisoned Pen Press
No Good Deed by Katherine Kovacic is a highly recommended character-driven mystery set in the Australian Outback.
Rena is a retired geologist and currently on the cross-country trip she and her husband Tom had planned before he passed away. As she is driving her kitted-out truck on the Great Northern Highway in Western Australia headed for her first destination she notices a burning vehicle off the road and immediately pulls off to see if she can help or stop the fire from spreading. There is no help for the victim inside so Rena calls the police and waits for them. After a few questions the police ask her to stay in the area by the nearby town of Fitzroy Crossing.
She soon discovers two things. First the area is a proposed site for diamond mining to begin operations and the the community is divided over the action. Then Rena learns that the victim in the vehicle is thought to be a geologist she knew decades earlier. Intrigued by the situation, Rena decides to start looking into the death, especially because it may be related to her area of expertise.
After an attention grabbing opening, No Good Deed features an even-paced plot, even slow at times, that relies more on character development and personal interaction over action, thrills, and twists. While Rena and the police conduct their own separate investigations, the connection to diamonds becomes clear. This make geology which focuses on the exploration for minerals and mining a major plot-point so it helps if this is also an interest of the reader as it becomes important to the plot. The case also becomes increasingly dangerous and threatening toward the end.
The key to enjoying this novel is Rena. She is portrayed as a complicated, fully-realized, intelligent older woman with strengths and weaknesses. She is grieving the loss of her husband and admits that having a focus and problem to solve will help her mindset. She is certainly a novice sleuth, but the skills she developed as a geologist are useful in noticing details and knowing areas of interest to investigate. Her friendship with much younger Aitch was a welcome addition to the narrative.
No Good Deed is a good choice for those who would enjoy an even-paced mystery focused on character development over non-stop action-packed twists. Thanks to Poisoned Pen Press for providing me with an advance reader's copy via NetGalley. My review is voluntary and expresses my honest opinion.
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