Promise Me by Harlan Coben

Who would have thought that simply asking the teen kids of long-time friend to call him if they needed a ride would have gotten Myron Bolitar into so much difficulty?  But when one of those kids – a teen-age girl – disappears AFTER she’d called Myron in the middle of the night for a ride, making him the last person to see her, all hell breaks loose! 

This book has it all, quirky characters, and an engrossing, suspenseful plot. 

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The Mystery of Mrs. Christie by Marie Benedict

This author of historical fiction about little-known women has Agatha Christie, the world’s best-selling author, as her subject in this book.  Taking a real event – Agatha’s disappearance for about two weeks in 1926 without explanation – Benedict writes he own suspenseful tale about that disappearance and Christie’s life leading up to that point.  Her theory about the disappearance – that it was a ploy by Agatha to force her husband to acknowledge his infidelity before granting him a divorce – is plausible, and certainly sheds light on female roles and limitations in the early 20th century. 

And now I want to go back and re-read all 70 (or so) of Agatha Christie’s mystery novels!!

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The Wife Upstairs by Rachel Hawkins

Poor (financially-challenged) Jane – a dog-walker for the rich in Thornfield Estates, a gated community in Birmingham, Alabama – meets Eddie Rochester, newly widowed after his wife, Bea, and her best friend Blanche apparently drowned in a boating accident, though their bodies have not yet been found.  When Jane and Eddie begin a relationship, Bea’s presence is a continuing third wheel as objects from her successful business are all around the house, and in the memories and stilted comments of her friends.  As Jane and Eddie get closer, she begins to see a side to him that frightens her.  And then Blanche’s body is found, and it turns out she didn’t drown – she was murdered! 

This is an excellent story – EVERY character has secrets and I did not anticipate the ending.  

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Blood Island by H. Terrell Griffin

Trouble has a way of finding former Special Forces military man turned lawyer despite his attempts to retire to the quiet life on Longboat Key.  First he discovers a body while taking an early-morning tour of a bird sanctuary.  Then, his ex-wife calls to ask for help finding her missing step-daughter – last seen on Longboat Key.  What at first seems like a simple missing persons case takes an ominous turn when all the clues lead to Blood Island, and a mysterious – or is he just crazy? – Minister. 

This is part of a series, but quiet enjoyable as a stand-alone story. 

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Walking Shadows by Faye Kellerman

Former LAPD homicide detective Peter Decker and his wife, Rina Lazarus, have move to the “quiet” college town of Greenbury, New York.  But the murder of Brady Neil, son of a convicted and imprisoned robber/murderer opens a can of worms that leads to more deaths with links to the jewelry store heist that got Brady’s dad put away.  The neighboring town of Hamilton’s current Police Chief, Victor Baccus, was the lead investigator on that case and it jump-started his career.  Baccus’s daughter, Detective Lennie Baccus, has just been assigned to help Decker with his investigation – but he’s not sure if she’s there to help – or hinder – the investigation as more bodies are found. 

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Mrs. Sherlock Holmes by Brad Ricca

The TRUE story of Grace Humiston, a New York lawyer, District Attorney, and detective who spurned traditional female roles in the early 20th century.  Her work exposed peonage issues (importing/recruiting European immigrants by offering jobs but putting them into impossible-to-repay debt in the process) in the South.  She also helped solve the case of a missing young woman – Ruth Cruger – that the police couldn’t, or wouldn’t, solve.

It’s always interesting to learn about a little-known woman who made her career defending powerless women and immigrants.

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Spider Woman’s Daughter by Anne Hillerman

This is Tony Hillerman’s daughter Anne’s first book continuing the stories of Navajo Nation Police officers Jim Chee, his wife Bernadette (Bernie), and retired Lieutenant Joe Leaphorn.  In this book, Bernie witnesses a shooting in broad daylight that leaves someone close to her hovering near death.  Because she was a witness, she “officially” can’t work on the investigation, but since it was assigned to her husband, Jim Chee, she still manages to be a part of it.  And as Bernie and Jim find clues that lead to a very old case of Leaphorn’s they also find themselves in mortal danger.

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Eight Perfect Murders by Peter Swanson

Many years ago bookseller Mal Kershaw compiled a list of “eight perfect murders” as written by the world’s best mystery writers for a bookshop blog.  Now, an FBI agent has come to him with questions about that list – and about some unsolved murders that seem to be following the methods of the classics from that list of years ago . . .  As he begins to “help” with the investigation, Mal finds that the killer is beginning to close in on him!

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1st Case by James Patterson

Despite being kicked out of MIT’s graduate program, with the aid of her mentor, Eve, Angela Hoot manages to snag an internship with the FBI in their Boston field office.  Despite having no field training, Angela is called to assist with a murder investigation due to her computer abilities and hacking skills.  But her lack of training and discipline becomes a liability when the computer hackers behind a series of gruesome murders turn their sights on her!

Typical Patterson:  a fast-paced and engaging story. . . But it leaves threads hanging and the main character is both a primary target and the only one – despite a whole field office full of FBI agents)) who can find the bad guys. 

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We Begin at the End by Chris Whitaker

In this book we meet Duchess Day Radley, a thirteen year old self-proclaimed outlaw, trying to hold her family together despite her mom’s self-destructive tendencies.  She crosses paths with Walk, the local police chief in the same small town in which he’d grown up with Star, Duchess’ mom, and Vincent, just released from prison for killing Star’s sister thirty years ago.  The stories of each of these people inter-twine as Duchess and Walk find the past revealing itself as they confront the future, and the possibility of love.

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