Showing posts with label mystery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mystery. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 29, 2020

"It's Not Over" (Eva Rae Thomas Book #6) by Willow Rose

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  “It’s Not Over” by Willow Rose brings red-headed former FBI profiler Eva Rae Thomas (Book #6) back into action. Inexperienced FBI agent Brad Shearer shows up on her doorstep in the middle of the night, seeking her help in solving a kidnapping.   “It’s Not Over” is one of the best, clearly written and well-plotted thrillers available.

Cole, the vulnerable elementary-school-age son of Peter and Mary Marshall, has disappeared from their Orlando, FL resort hotel rooms.  Ten years previously in Key West, FL twins Maggie and Blake vanished from their hotel rooms while parents Peter and Mary dined at a nearby restaurant.  The FBI called in on cases involving children of  “tender age,” twelve and under, assigned Eva Rae to work on Blake and Maggie’s vanishing.  

The case finally closed with the arrest and conviction of Mike Odell, previously convicted of child molestation and staying in the same hotel. Searchers found Blake’s drowned body,   but the only trace of Maggie was a butterfly hairclip near Blake. Because Eva Rae had worked Blake and Maggie’s case and knew the Marshalls Brad was able to persuade her to work on Cole’s kidnapping. 

Eva Rae torments herself by questioning the past. If Odell is in prison awaiting execution, did they arrest the wrong person the first time, or was the arrest correct, and Cole’s disappearance is a copycat occurrence.  Unknown to Blake and Eva Rae is that Cole’s abduction and Mary’s agony are just the tips of icebergs that others have set in motion.

Willow Rose plots this story carefully to keep readers interested and turning pages.  She lets readers into the mind of an unidentified person early in the story.  It is not a gentle or loving mind, but it continues to sneak into the plot when readers are least prepared.  Also, readers are introduced to Roy and his Dad early in the story.  They appear to have nothing to do with the main plot, but threads of their lives keep weaving in and out of “It’s Not Over.”  

  Eva Rae and her sister Sydney share an activity introduced to readers in Chapter one.   They own and run House of Freedom, which shelters trafficked girls in the CoCo Beach, FL.  Sometimes, they pick girls up off the streets.  Readers ride with the sisters as they recover Amber.    We meet Jessica in Chapter eight as she prepares to run away from home. Her mission is to hand on to her backpack and find a red-headed policewoman.  

The strands of the plot start to come together in Chapter 60, and by Chapter 66, Eva Rae can begin putting the strands together. She is invigorated and rebounds to finish up what she considers will be the end of the case.  The law enforcement part of the story ends with Eva Rae standing amid flashing blue, lights, EMTs, and local law enforcement.

The private part of Eva Rae’s story has to do with her love interest Matt, a detective with the local Coco Beach Police Department. She ties all the threads of the ten-year-old and the present-day case together for Matt. Their relationship ends “It’s Not Over” on a loving but mature note.

Despite all the various characters interwoven throughout the story, “It’s Not Over” is a compelling novel.  It is not a police procedural.  Willow Rose concentrates on the emotions of the characters tied into the story. It will be difficult for readers to interrupt the adventures of Eva Rae and put their e-readers down to attend to daily life.  

I requested and received a digital Advanced Reader Copy of this book from the publisher and the author through book funnel in exchange for an honest review. 



Monday, December 3, 2018

Ella Maud by Nicholas Nicastro: A Gripping Mystery Snatched from 19th-20th Century Life



     Ella Maude by Nicholas Nicastro is a mystery thriller that gripped me from the first page until the last.  This book contained subtle plot twists which kept the mystery moving, and me as reader immersed and trying to figure out where it was all going.  Characterization and scene settings are well drawn.  Whether it was an author oversight, intended or my lack of comprehension, not until well into the book that did I realize exactly who Ella Maude was.
     Nell Copsey disappeared around midnight on November 1901.  The scenarios around her disappearance and subsequently realized death make the mystery.  The Prologue sets the tone and draws the reader in by describing what Nell’s sister  Ollie becomes at the culmination of the action.         Nell’s disappearance and death are like tossing a pebble into water; none of the main characters escape misery and havoc in their lives. Nell was her mother’s favorite and in the North Carolina town of Elizabeth, she was perceived as being an ideal of womanhood, sort of a will ‘o the wisp.  Readers find in the last chapter that Nell really was an amusing tease and flirt.