Your rating:
When two dead bodies are found inside a wrecked car on the Golden Gate Bridge, Detective Lindsay Boxer doubts that it will be anything as simple as a traffic accident. The scene is more gruesome than anything she has seen before. It definitely wasn’t the crash that killed these people. While Lindsay starts to piece this case together, she gets a call she wasn’t expecting. Sightings of her ex-colleague-turned-ruthless-killer Mackie Morales have been reported. Wanted for three murders, Mackie has been in hiding since she escaped from custody. But now she’s ready to return to San Francisco and pay a visit to some old friends
No posts yet
Kick off the convo with a theory, question, musing, or update
Your rating:
3 Stars
I hate, hate HATE how short the chapters are in this book. The past few have had this issue. It's like they break in the middle of a paragraph to change chapters. It is so super dumb.
I enjoyed there being more than one main story line/villain though I don't understand how someone in this group always manages to be in danger. Honestly, I'd probably just stop being Lindsay's friend. Your life expectancy would probably double.
There was not a real view into the killer's mind, which is one of my favorite parts, so that was a letdown.
Best part? NO COURTROOMS. None. We do not step in a single courtroom. Yuki is my least favorite character, but her court scenes are the WORST.
I'm hoping at some point this gets back to the Women's Murder Club actually solving murders together, but I won't hold my breath or anything.
Also, the audiobook plays music during the action scenes, and it just makes it all seem so cheesy and stupid.
If you've stuck with this series this long, you might as well go ahead and read it. It's pretty fast paced, and it is fairly enjoyable. It's not the best book I've ever read, but I've read worse.
I have read every single one of these. the people who said this was poorly written must have given up on the series before they even started it was great