Last Known Address
A Novel
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
Fellow cops consider Detective Sloane Pearson a dumb blonde--even though she keeps up with the guys with her investigative skills and vulgar street talk. When she transfers from Homicide to work Chicago's Sex Crimes Division, her reputation for breaking hard-to-crack cases is tested by a brutal rapist who forces his victims to fight back as he rapes and strangles them. Tavia Gilbert's serious tone and deliberate pace add to escalating tensions when Sloan learns her friend is the rapist's latest victim. Gilbert's portrayal of Sloan's outrage and defiance when she's ordered to drop the case sounds fully authentic. But, otherwise, her characterization of Sloan's professionalism creates a distance that makes the detective difficult to empathize with. G.D.W. (c) AudioFile 2010, Portland, Maine
Starred review from May 25, 2009
Recently transferred from homicide to sex crimes, Chicago police detective Sloane Pearson pursues a serial rapist in Edgar-winner Schwegel's gritty fourth crime novel. Called in to interview the second in a series of victims who were beaten, raped and nearly strangled to death, Pearson knows the only way she'll have a case is if the traumatized woman will talk. But without a crime scene or detailed description of the attacker, Pearson's leads dry up fast. As she retraces the victims' steps, she uncovers a common thread that winds from the dilapidated blocks where the rapes occurred to one of the city's glitzy property development companies. Introduced in 2006's Probable Cause
, Pearson, the odd woman out in her new squad, shoulders the burden of a troublesome case even when her boss insists she quit. Despite a minimal body count, Schwegel ratchets up the tension, leaving readers breathless through to the last page. Author tour.
October 15, 2009
Edgar Award winner Schwegel (theresaschwegel.com) follows up her third novel, "Person of Interest", a "Publishers Weekly" Top Ten Mystery of 2007, with this second title to feature Det. Sloane Pearson, last seen in "Probable Cause" (2006). Newly transferred to Chicago's Sex Crimes Division, Pearson must deal with gender-related tensions in the workplace as she races to track down a rapist. While not as strong as "Person of Interest", this novel is certainly good enough to be recommended to fans of the genre. Deftly narrated by Tavia Gilbert (www.taviagilbert.com). [The Minotaur: St. Martin's hc was recommended to "readers who enjoy Lynda LaPlante's 'Prime Suspect' and Anna Travis series and Michael Connolly's Harry Bosch books," "LJ" 7/09.Ed.]Joyce Kessel, Villa Maria Coll., Buffalo
Copyright 2009 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
دیدگاه کاربران