Book Review: Yardley County (PEOPLE MAKING DANGER) by Adam Fike

Book Details:

Author: Adam Fike
Release Date: 20 March 2025
Series: PEOPLE MAKING DANGER
Genre: Noir, Mystery, Suspense, Thriller, Psychological
Format: E-book 
Pages: 76 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
NOIR MYSTERY – A dead escaped convict finds himself, and his redemption, at the hometown robbery where a gunshot began his criminal career.
PEOPLE MAKING DANGER is a collection of quick, fun, three-act, feature-length stories, full of suspense, surprises and dark humor.
Reading. Why not do it for fun sometimes?
More at AdamFike.com/books
All Rights Reserved

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Yardley County by Adam Fike is a slow-burning, deeply atmospheric story that captures the loneliness of rural life and the small, almost imperceptible shifts that change everything. It’s the kind of book that takes its time, inviting you to settle into the rhythms of its world before showing you the fractures beneath its surface.

Set in a fictional southern county, the novel threads together the lives of characters bound by place and silence. Fike has a poet’s ear for dialogue, sparse but loaded, and a painter’s eye for setting. You can almost feel the humidity of late summer, the creak of porch boards, and the oppressive stillness of a town that’s seen too much yet talks too little. What unfolds is part mystery, part psychological portrait, and part elegy: a meditation on guilt, grief, and the tendency to bury what we can’t face.

What I found remarkable is how Fike resists melodrama. His writing is restrained but emotionally sharp; every revelation feels earned. The characters linger long after the final page because they feel real. There’s empathy even in their worst choices, and Fike uses that empathy to build tension in the best of ways. The moral questions the novel raises, about justice, memory, and forgiveness, unfold slowly, like the unspooling of a long-held confession.

Yardley County is a haunting, beautifully crafted work of literary suspense. It’s a story that’s less about what happens and more about how it feels to live with what’s happened. Perfect for readers of Kent Haruf, Celeste Ng, or Where the Crawdads Sing, it’s an unforgettable exploration of a tender heart under pressure.


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