The 15th is as good as the
other 14. this one has lots of
twists & turns, with an interesting ending.
Sadly disappointed Well I for one am really disappointed that Patterson has gone over to the "beating heart and burning loins" gendre. He even made the Women's Murder Club' look like a bunch of silly teenage girls. Really -- maybe the only slick phrase that wasn't in the book was 'be still my beating heart'. Hope for your sake it was worth attracting all the romance hungry followers, because you surely lost me.
Joe is Besmirched Moving from one salacious seduction scene, to a ghastly murder scene, the reader is bombarded with this crime scene that plays over and over again throughout the book. Lindsay Boxer's husband Joe is somehow involved in the crime. He's been caught on surveillance cameras, and as Lindsay discovers he is not where she thought he was supposed to be, the secrets Joe has kept from her causes her to doubt him. Then Joe disappears. Lindsay is in charge of finding the culprit(s) to four murders, and also is trying to unravel what has happened in the disappearance of her husband Joe. This reader felt somewhat smudged by the time I had finished reading.
Not up to par While it is one of the Women's Murder Club offerings, it is NOT up to the usual standard. This one reads like it was written by someone not familiar with the series. another thing, this book was released in 2016 yet the one reference to the President was George Bush. Was the author(s) asleep for the past 8 years??? A lot of the 'action' skips about and seems disjointed at times.
excellent series Book 15 in this excellent series involving four independent, well-educated females set in San Francisco has Lyndsey Boxer question the man she married, father of her daughter Julie. Is he FBI/former CIA, or married to her using her as a cover when she meets Allison.