A Deadly Row (Murder by the Numbers, Bk 1)
Author:
Genre: Mystery, Thriller & Suspense
Book Type: Paperback
Author:
Genre: Mystery, Thriller & Suspense
Book Type: Paperback
carlamo - reviewed on + 269 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 9
I always like cozies with little built-in puzzles sprinkled throughout the story, and that's what I thought this would be. I was very wrong. The main character, Savannah Stone, creates number puzzles for newspapers, however, not a single one appears anywhere in the book. The "big" puzzle (clues being left by the killer) was so uninteresting, and almost completely irrelevant, that I never bothered to try to solve it.
The characters were paint-by-numbers cliches, and the conversations between Savannah and her husband, a retired police chief, made me feel like I was going to overload on sugary sweetness. Throw in a lonely multi-millionaire who wants to be BFFs after a few minutes, an unsolved family mystery, old friends acting oddly, and you've got the perfect recipe for another boring, improbable story.
The whole thing was unflinchingly formulaic - right down to the killer who explains his motives while trying to kill our brave heroine. No real suspense, no real-life situations, no entertaining puzzles, one-dimensional characters, and way too many words. Cut out all the "I love you" - "No, I love you" - "No, I love you more" dialogue and descriptions of how beautiful the scenery was and it might have been long enough for a short story. But it would still need a plot.
The characters were paint-by-numbers cliches, and the conversations between Savannah and her husband, a retired police chief, made me feel like I was going to overload on sugary sweetness. Throw in a lonely multi-millionaire who wants to be BFFs after a few minutes, an unsolved family mystery, old friends acting oddly, and you've got the perfect recipe for another boring, improbable story.
The whole thing was unflinchingly formulaic - right down to the killer who explains his motives while trying to kill our brave heroine. No real suspense, no real-life situations, no entertaining puzzles, one-dimensional characters, and way too many words. Cut out all the "I love you" - "No, I love you" - "No, I love you more" dialogue and descriptions of how beautiful the scenery was and it might have been long enough for a short story. But it would still need a plot.
Back to all reviews by this member
Back to all reviews of this book
Back to Book Reviews
Back to Book Details
Back to all reviews of this book
Back to Book Reviews
Back to Book Details