The Wife Stalker – Liv Constantine

 Ok so I guess it’s time to put to rest the idea that abbook like The Wife Stalker is not the type of book I typically read. I guess it’s more appropriate to say it’s one of the various types of books I read. In fact I’ve read more of these types of books than science fiction so far the year.

The Wife Stalker is a fine Psychological Thriller. There are no serial killers lurking in its pages just two women fighting over one family. One a young woman Piper Reynard  has experienced tragedies in her life. And she is trying to create a new life with a husband who comes with two children. The other Joanna is trying to save her marriage and protect her husband and those same two children.

The Wife Stalker is composed of alternating chapters written from the point of view both Piper and Joanna. Throughout the book Piper struggles trying to get her new step-children  to accept her. While Joanna tries to dig into Piper‘s past to prove she is not who she says she is and is actually a threat to the children.

Throughout  the book I found myself rooting for both women. I felt sorry for Piper as she struggle with her new stepchildren. While her actions left me wondering if she was a threat to them. And what Joana was discovering lex. To to wonder if Piper really wasn’t who she said she was.

The results of  both Joanna‘s search and Piper‘s actions led me to believe the book was not going to end  well for anyone. Boy was I wrong. Wait for it! You won’t  be disappointed.

The Bottom Line 

The bottom line is The Wife Stalker is a very good psychological thriller. I am starting to learn there is a difference between action thrillers, which I am a big fan of, and psychological thrillers, a genre of which  I am learning to become a fan.

The Wife Stalker a 2020 release is the third book by Liv Constantine. Liv Constantine, I learned from reading the cover of this book, is the pen name sisters Lynne and Valerie Constantine. Anyway I will be checking out their other two books The Last Mrs. Parrish and The Last Time I Saw You.

Book 41 of 2021

Links for the Further Exploration of the Novels of Liv Constantine

Author‘s Website
Facebook
Twitter
Instagram
Amazon

A Good Kill from John McMahon. Book 3 in a Great Series!

Ok so I had started this post as a welcome back post, but Ill’ll save that doesn’t the next post let’s just get back to the mysteries. And here’s a good one…….


A Good Kill (Detective P.T. Marsh #3)

Today I finished A Good Kill by John McMahon.  It is book 40 for 2021 and book 3 in McMahon’s Detective P.T.Marsh series. I read The Good Detective, the first book in the series in December of 2020 and book two The Evil Men Do in February of this year.

The Story

P.T. Is a detective with the Mason Falls police department in northern Georgia. In this instalment P.T.and his partner Remy Martin are called to a Magnet school in Mason Falls where a potentially active shooter is holding three students and a teacher hostage in the Art Room.

The shooter has already killed one teacher. Soon P.T. has the shooter in his crosshairs….should he take the shot?   A call from the Georgia governor to whom Marsh owes a favor and a threatening move by the shooter results in an answer of yes. It was a “good Kill right? It’s question that haunts P.T.for the rest of the book.

After  the shooting case is turned over to the Feds, P.T. and Remy are assigned to a double homicide investigation. In addition P.T is still haunted by the murder (made to look like an accident) off his wife and son. Marsh is still trying to find who hired his wife’s killer and why?

My Thoughts on John McMahon and the P.T.Marsh Series

I have really  really enjoyed all three of the books in this series! I guess that’s why I’ve read all three in around seven months! Everything about these books is terrific. Both the characters and the storylines are interesting, suspenseful and believable.

So Check Them Out IN ORDER!! As for me, I’ll have to wait until 2022 when John MCMahon will be introducing a new character!

About John McMahon

Creating My Proposed June Reading List – Part 1

  Sculpting My Proposed June Reading List – Part 1 From  My Mountain of “To Be Read” library books.

 

Books for My Proposed June Reading List
Yesterday I mentioned my Mountain of “To Be Read” library books. The above photograph shows nine of the books I have checked out. The first  thing you must understand is that all of the books were not checked out on the same day. Now I don’t know if any of you have this problem.

I have a tendency to take two books back and bring home three! Take back three bring home four and before long you have a stack like the one you see at the top of this post!

Only two of the books were checked out on a whim!  Here are the first five books atop the mountain! Let’s  create My Proposed June Reading List – Part 1.


 Winterkill

Winterkill – (Dark Iceland #6) Ragnar Jonnason

I’ve read three Ragnar Jonnason books so far this year and one in December of 2020. The book I read in December of 2020 was Rupture. It’s Book #4 in the series. Wait, What! No way yes way…White Out is book #4. Damm  the first book on the list and I screwed up. I will move it to the bottom off the pile. Then I’ll check the library for White Out and read that  first!

Anyway I’ve been reading a lot of Jonasson’s books are they’re great!

book on My Proposed June Reading List

Whispers of the Dead – (Special Tracking Unit #2) – Spencer Kope  Currently Reading

Magnus “Steps” Craig is the prime member of the three team FBI Special Tracking Unit. He is in fact the reason for the Special Tracking Unit. The reason is that after being in an accident and dead for many minutes, he was revived, and now he sees people’s shine. Each person has a color and textural shine that is as individual as a fingerprint. Match the shine to a suspect and you can solve a murder case!

In March I read Shadows of the Dead book 3 in the currently,  three book series. The fourth book Echoes of the Dead is scheduled to be released in September of this year. That means Collecting the Dead book 1 in the series needs to be read before that  release date.

All in all , a very enjoyable series so far.

A book on My Proposed June Reading List P
These Women
– Ivy Pochoda

Not the type of book I’d typically read, but I thoroughly enjoyed Visitation Street, so I thought I’d give it a try. From Goodreads:

So Ivy Pochoda creates a kaleidoscope of loss, power, and hope featuring five very different women whose lives are steeped in danger and anguish. They’re connected by one man and his deadly obsession, though not all of them know that yet. There’s Dorian, still adrift after her daughter’s murder remains unsolved; Julianna, a young dancer nicknamed Jujubee, who lives hard and fast, resisting anyone trying to slow her down; Essie, a brilliant vice cop who sees a crime pattern emerging where no one else does; Marella, a daring performance artist whose work has long pushed boundaries but now puts her in peril; and Anneke, a quiet woman who has turned a willfully blind eye to those around her for far too long. The careful existence they have built for themselves starts to crumble when two murders rock their neighborhood. Read More

Cold Windd
Cold Wind –
Paige Shelton 

This was on of the books i picked out on a whim. Since the cover only said “A Mystery” it wasn’t part of a series. Wrong! It is book 2 in the Alaska Mysteries series. Like the Special Tracking Unit series this is a new series. Book 3 in the series will be released in December. So I think I will set Cold Wind aside and read Thin Ice first!

A book on My Proposed June Reading List
One by One
– Ruth Ware

I became a Ruth Ware fan last year after reading Turn of the Key.  So when I saw One by One at the library I picked it up. It didn’t hurt that it had just seen that it has been shortlisted for the Ian Fleming Silver Dagger Award  for thrillers!

Getting snowed in at a beautiful, rustic mountain chalet doesn’t sound like the worst problem in the world, especially when there’s a breathtaking vista, a cozy fire, and company to keep you warm. But what happens when that company is eight of your coworkers…and you can’t trust any of them? Read More

Sounds good to me!

As a Side Note: Michael Robotham’s When She Was Good was also shortlisted. It’s Book #2 in Robotham’s Cyrus Haven Series. Check It Out !

Michael’s series featuring pyshcologist  Joe O’Loughlin is an all-time favorite!

My  Proposed June Reading List – Part 1

So I’ve presented in this post the first five books on my Mountain “To Be Read” library pile. Let’s see the end result of my ramblings……

First, I will continue reading Whispers of the Dead – next up will be Ivy Pochoda’s These Women : followed by   One by One – Ruth Ware

I will set aside Winterkill – Ragnar Jonasson and Cold Wind – Page Shelton.  I will find and check out the books that precede them before enjoying them!

 

 

Crooked River – Preston & Child – Pendergast is Gold Again!

If you’ve read some of my past blog posts you probably know that I am a fan of mystery and thriller series. Some of those series I have been reading religiously for 20 or more years. Others I have read several books, stopped a lost track of the series. The Agent Pendergast series from Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child is one of the later.

I read the first two books in the series Relic and Reliquary, which were terrific. Then I read several more books in the series. I also enjoyed those books. However, through the years other books always were read instead of Pendergast novels.

Over the last few years, I have picked up several overstock copies of books in the series and I have not read them! Shame on me! A week or so ago, I saw Crooked River book #19 in the series, at the library. Instead of saying, I’ll just wait until I’ve read the books that come before it, I checked it out,  I’m glad I did.

About Pendergast and Crooked River

Aloysius Xingu Leng Pendergast is a special agent for the FBI from Wikipedia…

He once worked out of the New Orleans Field Office of the FBI, but resides in New York City and works out of the New York Field Office; he frequently travels out of state to investigate cases which interest him, often those appearing to be the work of serial killers. More at Wikipedia

In Crooked River Pendergast is presented an intriguing case on Captiva and Sanibel islands off the coast of southern Florida. Hundreds of shoes have been found in the Gulf of Mexico and washed up on the island beaches. The aspect of the case that makes it super intriguing is that a severed foot is still in each shoe!

Soon Pendergast recruits his former partner Agent Coldmoon to provide assistance. While the Coast Guard and the local police search for the simple answer. Pendergast knows the case is far more complex. Can they find the answers before the trail goes cold!!

Agent Pendergast is one of the most interesting characters in the mystery fiction genre and shame on me for not reading more of these books!

Crooked River is fast-paced and well developed you never even have a chance to lose interest in the  story. And ultimately the solution contains aspects of current events!!

About Preston & Child

Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child are a dynamic writing duo, but they also have solo careers. I have read several of Preston’s solo novels like The Codex and enjoyed them. Lincoln Child has a 5 book series featuring Jeremy Logan. Logan is an “enigmologist” an investigator who studies phenomena that have no plausible explanation. I have read one of the Jeremy Logan books no 5 The Forgotten Room.

Douglas Preston is also the author of a really great nonfiction book The Monster of Florence. His personal murder mystery where he ends up as a suspect!  Highly recommended!!

Reading On….

After reading Crooked River I am going to try and read more books from the series. I probably should start with The Book of the Dead which is book 7 of the Pendergast series and the end of the trilogy featuring his brother Diogenes. The easy thing it’s already on my bookshelf. The hard thing will be to fit it in amongst the eleven books I have checked out of the library! I think a few of those books which were just impulse checkouts will go back unread! Lol

 

Thoughts of the November Man lead to Series I Miss!

Thoughts of The November Man and Three Missed Series 

So the other day while I was straightening up, I came across one of my old book journals. The journal covers the years from 1992 to 2000 (roughly my 40s).

Anyway, when I was looking at the journal, I also for some reason checked my Goodreads’ bookshelves. I discovered  none of the books from 1993 were listed. So I  started out to shelve the books.

Book No. 8 for the year was Burning the Apostle  by Bill Granger. It is the 13th and final book in Granger’s November Man series. The first November Man book I read was The Infant of  Prague, which I read in 1988. Between 1988 and 1993 I read the last five books in the series, as well as, the second book in the series Schism.

In the late 1990s Granger had a series of strokes. Finally, in 2000 he had a major stroke which ended his writing career. He passed away in 2012. In 2014 the November Man came to the big screen with Pierce Brosnan playing Devereaux.

Thinking about The November Man started me thinking about other series that I used to read. I thought of three more series. The authors of the following series have all passed away but their books should live on!

Brady Coyne – William G Tapply

Death at Charity’s Point -lWilliam G Tapply

William G Tapply’s first Brady Coyne novel Death at Charity’s Point was published in 1985. The 28th and final Brady Coyne novel Outwitting Trolls was published in 2010.

Brady is a Boston lawyer with a small but very rich clientele, that somehow always found a way to get in trouble. Most of the action on the books takes place outside of the court room.

Anyway,  Brady’s character is great and so are the supporting characters. So check out a Brady Coyne book.

There are 28 books in the Brady Coyne series. I have read 18 of them. Hmm, even though William G Tapply has passed, I still have 10 Brady Coune books to enjoy. So I should read at least one soon!

Red Chameleon -Stuart M Kaminsky

Porfiry Rostnikov – Stuart Kaminsky

Porfiry Rostnikow is an inspector with the Moscow police department. He is a….

…. A bruising bear of a man, whose love of weightlifting and American pizza has left him as squat and powerful as a . 38 bullet, Rostnikov may be the toughest cop in Moscow.

The first Rostnikov book I read was A Cold Red Sunrise the fifth book in the series. I read it because I saw it had won the Edgar award as best mystery novel. It wasn’t long after that I went back and read the earlier books in the series.

This series is one of my all time favorites I love Porfiry and his family along with all of his fellow officers. One of my favorite characters in the series is Emil Karpo who is referred to as the “Tartar” or most often as the “Vampire” based on his appearance.  Emil is a true believer in the Communist system and Will support it to the very end.

The stories are always well-written , fast-moving and interesting. So check it out!

There are 16 books in the series. I have read 13 of them. It seems I missed three books (9-11) published in the mid-90s. Note to self finish the series!!

Stuart M. Kaminsky was a profiling writer. In addition to the Porfiry Rostnikov series Kaminsky wrote series featuring Toby Peters, a private detective in 1940s Hollywood (1977-2004), veteran Chicago police officer Abe Lieberman (1990-2007) and finally a  Sarasota, Florida, process server named Lew Fonesca (1999-2009).

Kaminsky passed away in  October of 2009.

The Beast of Valhalla - GEORGE C Chesbro
Robert (Mongo the Magnificent) Fredrickson – George C. Chesbro

Another series that I miss features a different kind of Private Eye Dr. Robert “Mongo” Fredrickson, a.k.a. Mongo the Magnificent. Mongo is …..

…..a fictional private eye and criminologist who has dwarfism……his rather unusual nickname is actually his stage name, from his days as an acrobat in a circus (a career that is over by the time the book series begins).

Mongo and his brother Garth always seemed to get involved in some kind of case with some strangeness in it.

Patricia Sullivan of the Washington Post wrote the following in Chesbro’s 2008 obituary….

 ….Playboy magazine as “Raymond Chandler meets Stephen King by way of Alice’s looking glass.”

Mr. Chesbro’s best-known character “is definitely an acquired taste that requires certain suspensions of perception and expectation,” wrote Dick Adler in a 1993 Chicago Tribune review.

“Imagine a dwarf who honed his physical skills as a circus acrobat called Mongo the Magnificent and then, using his real name, Dr. Robert Frederickson, became a world-famous criminologist,” Adler wrote. “Add to that the fact that Mongo’s world is filled with good and bad witches, satanists, warlocks and magicians of every shade as well as the normal run of murderers, swindlers and thieves.”

The writing, nonstop and violent, can also be very funny. Mongo played on a local  softball team in his spare time and noted that he led the league in walks.  Complete obituary

There are 14 books in the Mongo series. I have read all of them except Dream of the Falling Eagle the final book in the series.

So thinking about these four series has stirred up a lot of memories. I think I should create a mini-reading challenge”. I’ll challenge myself to read at least one book by each of these authors over the next four months! Anyone want to join me!!

 

Dark Sky -C.J. Box (Joe Pickett #21)

I have been reading c.J. Box‘s  Joe Pickett books for a long time and Dark Sky the 21st book in the series is in my opinion one of his best!

The Story

In Dark Sky  Joe must lead an elk hunting trip for a famous tech mogul. Steve Price, better known as Steve-2, the founder of Aloft and the social media platform  ConFab. Steve-2 wants to track, kill and dress an elk. Needless to say things don’t go well almost from the beginning. As the hunting party begins the hunting party are being watched by the Thomas  family. Seems the father Earl has a score to settle with Steve-2 and he’s brought along his to sons Kirby and Brad to help him settle it!

Meanwhile Nate Romanowski and Sheridan Pickett Joe’s daughter who is also Nate’s falconry apprentice have their own problems. Seems someone is stealing from their falconry nests. And Nate is none to happy with that situation!

Thoughts about the Joe Pickett Series

I have enjoyed this series since I read my first Joe Pickett book back in 2004. I started with Savage Run the second book in the series and I quickly went back and read book one Open Season! And I’ve read every book with the exception of Cold Wind (Book # 11). I started reading Cold Wind when it came out. However, I ended up returning Cold Wind to the library unread. The most likely reason was being distracted by another book.

The one aspect of the series that has made it most enjoyable is that Joe and his family along with Nate Romanowski have aged! Joe is now 51 and he’s not moving real well. And while age may be a part of his problem the main reason he has a limp is he was shot a while back. And now Joe is going to use all his wiles to keep both himself and his clients safe.

The Bottom Line

The bottom line is Dark Sky is a fast-paced exciting novel with well developed characters. And while it may be more enjoyable if you know the characters, I think Box provides enough info for the reader to recognize and like Joe Pickett’s character. Box does a good job of developing the other characters i.e. Steve-2 and Earl Thomas and his sons are well.

So go find it read it and then you only have 20 more books featuring Joe and his family to enjoy! As for me, I need to go back and read Cold Wind!


C J Box author of Storm Watch

About C J Box

Charles James Box Jr. is an American author of more than thirty novels. Box is the author of the Joe Pickett series, as well as several standalone novels, and a collection of short stories.


If you like the family and character connections in this series…

You might also enjoy:

  • William Kent Krueger — the Cork O’Connor series blends crime with family, history, and a strong sense of place
  • Michael Robotham — especially the Joe O’Loughlin books, where personal lives are always part of the story
  • Peter May — the Lewis Trilogy, where past, family, and landscape are tightly woven together

The Residence -Andrew Pyper – A Haunted White House!

So this morning I didn’t do my typical workout first thing. Instead I finished reading The Residence by Andrew Pyper. It’s the first book I’ve read by Pyper and the 27th book I’ve read in 2021.

About Andrew Pyper

Andrew Pyper is a Canadian author hailing from Stratford, Ontario. He has a B.A. and M.A. in English Literature from McGill University, He also has a law degree from the University of Toronto. However , he has never practiced law.

His novel, The Demonologist, won the 2014 International Thriller Writers Award for Best Hardcover Novel, and was a #1 bestseller in Canada.

The Residence is his 11th novel and the 5th published  by Simon & Shuster.

About The Residence

The Residence is a ghost story set in the White House during the administration of Franklin Pierce. While I never really found the book overly scary, I did find the overall story intriguing.

Franklin Pierce is one of the Presidents that you don’t really learn a lot about in school. I had read previously about the Pierce’s losing their son Benjamin (Bennie) in a train accident  It’s Bennie’s death and Jean Pierce’s attempts to contact him in  the afterlife that is central to the story.

While I didn’t love the book I did find it an interesting read. When I was in the middle of the book I decided I wanted to know more about Franklin and his wife and family. So I googled “best books about Franklin Pierce”. There are only a couple of biographies the most recent was written by Michael Holt and is part of The American President Series. So I checked at my library for the book and it’s on its way to me!

Summarizing, The Residence was for me an ok read (3/5 stars). It kept me interested to the end but didn’t provide a lot of scary moments. However, there were a few thought provoking moments about slavery and the creation of our nation. So check it out! As for me, I’ll be checking out some of Pyper’s other books.

Finally,  I was going to write about the rest of my morning in this post. However,  since I went on and on about The Residence I think I’ll post this and tell you about my morning in my next post!

Links for the Further Exploration of the Books of Andrew Pyper.

Author’s Website
Facebook
Instagram
Goodreads
Twitter

 

 

 

 

 

Romeo’s Way (Mike Romeo #2) – James Scott Bell

…..

Romeo’s Way -James Scott Bell
Book 22 – Romeo’s Way (Mike Romeo #2) – James Scott Bell

Through the years I have had many of my favorite mystery and thriller characters whom I liked because of their wise-cracking and  often times self-deprecating nature. Mike Romeo has joined that group. In fact, he may be the current leader of the group! And with his espousing of philosophical quotes, he may be in a group all by himself. For me he may be the most interesting character in the mystery genre.

In Romeo’s Way, Mike is hired by a political candidate, who is being accused by his opponent, of having an affair. Mike is tasked with going undercover and joining the opposition’s campaign team to discover what’s happening. And the path leading to the final solution is a wild twisting one!

Romeo’s Way was a quick read. It was a well interesting throughout the book so the pages just flew by.

When I went to store the book on my Goodreads shelf I saw that Romeo’s Way was the winner of the International Thriller Writers Award for beat e-book original. In my opinion it is a well-deserved award.

Additionally, while I have several books on my “to be read” library shelf, I wouldn’t be surprised if I snuck Romeo’s Hammer  book #3 in the series into the mix!! So Check it out!

Links for the Further Exploration of the Writing of James Scott Bell

Author’s Website
Facebook
Twitter
Amazon
Goodreads

A former trial lawyer associated with one of L.A.’s top law firms and later working out of an independent office, JAMES SCOTT BELL is now a full-time, award-winning suspense writer. He lives and writes in Los Angeles. You can visit his website at www.jamessottbell.com.

Ragnar Jonasson -The Darkness -Hidden Iceland #1 Starts a Thrilling Series!

The Darkness - Ragnar Jonasson

My first introduction to the works of Ragnar Jonasson was Nightblind. I read Nightblind in 2018 and while i was reading book 2 in the series, the series was already up to book #5. Additionally, Ragnar started a second series in 2018 the Hidden Island series. That series was up to book #3 in 2021 when I read The Darkness.. Anyway, as I discovered the books I got really confused about what book number I read in what series! Here is book ! in the Hidden Iceland Series The Darkness

The Darkness

The Darkness features Detective Inspector Hulda Hermannsdóttir of the Reykjavík police. A 64 year-old widow she is waiting out her time until she can retire at 65. However, her employers have other ideas and soon Hulda is forced into an early retirement. She is given two weeks to go home and wait until her official retirement begins.

Rather than being allowed to  continue to work  on her caseload, she is told she can work on a cold case of her choice.

Hulda chooses the case of a young Russian woman whose body had washed up on an Icelandic shore a year earlier. A cursory investigation was completed. The death was declared a suicide and the case is quietly closed.

As Hulda starts to dig into the case, she quickly realizes it may not have been a suicide but rather a murder.

As the novel progresses the reader is provided two parallel story lines told in flashbacks

One story line involves a mother who had to place her illegitimate baby daughter in a care facility because she couldn’t afford to take care of her. And their struggles throughout the child’s life.

The other story is about a young women who is taken on a trip to an isolated and dangerous valley in the Icelandic mountains.

All three converge to provide a very dramatic ending to The Darkness.

Gregg Hurwitz’s writes on the cover of The Darkness ..” I dare you not to be shocked” and I do too !!

Final Thoughts 

The bottom line – I really liked the book. I thought Hulda’s character the was both interesting and well developed. Additionally, I also know that I had some of the same feelings as I approached and moved into retirement. Now, I can’t wait to move onto The Island and The Mist


About Ragnar Jonasson

Ragnar Jonasson is author of the award winning and international bestselling Dark Iceland series.

His debut Snowblind, first in the Dark Iceland series, went to number one in the Amazon Kindle charts shortly after publication. The book was also a no. 1 Amazon Kindle bestseller in Australia. Snowblind has been a paperback bestseller in France.

Nightblind won the Dead Good Reader Award 2016 for Most Captivating Crime in Translation.

Snowblind was called a “classically crafted whodunit” by THE NEW YORK TIMES, and it was selected by The Independent as one of the best crime novels of 2015 in the UK.

 

 

The Boy from the Woods -Harlan Coben delivers again!

The Boy from the Woods - Harlan Coben

I have been reading, all be it at a slower pace than typical during the winter months. So far, I have finished three books. I finished The Boy From the Woods by Harlan Coben yesterday afternoon. It’s book number 3 for 2021.

The  book is a stand alone novel and not part of the Myron Bolitar series. However, it does feature criminal lawyer Hester Crimstein, who has made appearances in many Bolitar books

About The Boy from the Woods

In The Boy from the Woods Hester‘s grandson Matthew contacts her and asks her to look into the disappearance of a school mate, Naomi Pine. Naomi is an outcast and a target for relentless bullying.

The search for Naomi brings Hester back to her home and town, where she raised her four boys. The town where her son,  Matthew‘s father lost his life in an auto accident.

To aid in the search,  Hester contacts Wilde, the boy from the woods. Thirty years earlier, Wilde was found in the  woods living as a feral child wirth no memory of his past.  Wilde grew up in a foster home and David became his best friend.

The search for Naomi led Wilde, and Hester to the Maynard family. Their son Crash is a classmate of Naomi and Matthew and a bullier of Naomi’s.

The Maynard family is embroiled in a controversy revolving around tapes that may end the Presidential campaign of a pat reality show host. As the search for Naomi intensifies the two storylines collide and Wilde and Hester need to use all their wiles to figure it all out!!

Final Thoughts

Overall, I didn’t race though most of  The Boy from the Woods like I have in other Harlan Coben books. However, the second half of the book and the conclusion more than made up for any deficiencies of the first half of the book!

Overall , I found Wilde to be an interesting character and certainly would like to see him in more action. It was also interesting to see Hester in her own book with only one reference to Myron!

I did think that aspects of the book are very timely. And considering the similarity to what we saw during the Trump presidency.

Again while I didn’t think it was Coben’s best, it’s still a 4-star book for me. I look forward know to see the Netflix show and see if the characters are anything like I imagined!!

Links for Further Explorations of the Works of Harlan Coben

Author’s Website
Wikipedia
Goodreads
Amazon