Title: Copycat
Author: Diane Saxon
Stars: 3 1/2
Review:
This book is part of a series and while the author tries hard to catch readers up without taking to much time away from the main story readers jumping in might be still a little lost.
Once the story starts readers will find themselves in a thriller that will have readers wondering what is going on and where is this going but in the best of ways. The characters are interesting enough but fall into the traditional police\Constable characters and do not move away from that box.
The find themselves watching as murder are happening unable to stop or tell the characters to run away. The author is graphic and describe in detail what is happening to the point of painful.
In the end the book is a decent read for those who like mysteries with a little more gore.
Synopsis:
When a beautiful, red haired nurse’s body is found mutilated in her house in Lawley the morning after a date with Detective Constable Ryan Downey, all eyes turn to him.
With a very specific modus operandi, Detective Sergeant Jenna Morgan and her team know exactly who the offender is, the trouble is he’s currently serving a life stretch in HMP Long Lartin.
It soon becomes evident to DS Morgan and her team that there maybe a copycat killer is on the loose.
In a race against time, they need to track down the copycat and discover who is pulling whose strings?
Kindle Edition, 392 pages
Expected publication: February 18th 2020 by Boldwood Books
Diane Saxon lives in the Shropshire countryside with her tall, dark, handsome husband, two gorgeous daughters, a Dalmatian, one-eyed kitten, ginger cat, six chickens and a black Labrador called Beau, whose name has been borrowed for her hero in For Heaven's Cakes.
After working for years in a demanding job, on-call and travelling great distances, Diane gave it all up when her husband said “follow that dream”.
Having been hidden all too long, her characters have burst forth demanding plot lines of their own and she’s found the more she lets them, the more they’re inclined to run wild.
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