“Don’t think you’re untouchable…you or your son.” Then a dial tone..
Shrewd, hardened New York homicide detective Jasmine (“Jazz”) Steele’s just come back from a grisly crime scene involving the body of a brutally-beaten young girl, the second she’s investigated this week. That was horrendous, but with these eight words, ending ominously in “your son,” Jazz’s immediate fear is for her vulnerable … Jazz’s immediate fear is for her vulnerable nephew, Chase, who’s already been through hell in his seven short years. In Kimberly Amato’s hard-boiled yet deeply emotional police procedural, no one is spared tough breaks and turbulent anguish. A lesser cop than Jazz would barely be able to cope.
A year ago, a gruesome car accident claimed the lives of her only brother and his wife, making her the de facto mother of 7-year-old Chase. The sudden household change ended in the loss of her life partner and still best friend, chic police psychologist Frankie, not to mention the dashing of Jazz’s lifelong dreams of becoming a successful mystery novelist. Now every day is a battle against Chase’s demons—and her own.
Quick reconnaissance reveals the call wasn’t a clever joke courtesy of Hadley, Frankie’s droll actress roommate, nor was it Victor, the wry police department coroner who happens to be Jazz’s confidante. Further detective work shows the caller wanted Jazz to find him—along with the fresh dead body he left for her in a Harlem warehouse.
With a shadow on Chase and the aid of Frankie’s grace-under-fire, not to mention Victor’s brandy-fueled heart-to-hearts, Jazz–who has more ‘tude than even the toughest investigator, male or female–navigates the cruel streets of New York City while struggling to keep custody of the only family she has left, doggedly in search of the elusive, psychopathic murderer who seems to be summarily killing off women who look suspiciously like someone close to Jazz… and she’s not willing to lose yet another person she loves.
Fans of the exciting new wave of hard-boiled women sleuths created by writers like Megan Abbott, Laura Lippmann, Lisa Lutz, and Vicki Hendricks will be attracted to the author’s take-no-prisoners style, and her unflinching attention to harrowing detail.
Yet lovers of traditional mysteries will appreciate the web of fierce loyalty tempered with fearful caution that links Jazz’s tiny but hardy support system—Victor, Frankie, and Hadley, not to mention Chase himself. Somehow or other, Amato manages to mix all the excitement of an action thriller with the swirling emotions of a mainstream psychological novel.
Those with a weakness for badass female cops like Mary Shannon of In Plain Sight and Olivia Benson of Law & Order SVU will revel in Jasmine Steele’s gritty determination laced with compassion. Readers of lesbian mysteries will be reminded of Sandra Scoppettone’s Lauren Laurano and Laurie R. King’s Kate Martinelli.
And it’s also a great read for fans of resilient heroines of psychological thrillers like Liz Keen of The Blacklist and Carrie Mathison of Homeland, who will love Jasmine Steele’s fearlessness, tinged with the very real emotional roller coaster of love turned to grief.
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This is the most poorly edited book I have read since I stopped grading student papers. Grammatical, and punctuation errors abound. Reading the last 2/3s of the book became a game to find all of the errors!
Awsome read. I enjoy this author!
Story was confusing and plot was thin, but the worst was all the misprints. Couldn’t read more than few sentences without encountering one. I don’t recommend it at all.
This had so many grammatical errors it was hard to read this and I would not read any of this authors books again.
Too many characters. Only read 2 chapters.
I really liked the book except for the constant typos, grammar mistakes etc. There was one at least every page. Even character names got messed up at one point. These distracted me from the story which I enjoyed.
The story was pretty good, but it could do with some heavy editing for spelling, etc. Further into the book it got worse until it was distracting from the story.
Way too many typos and misspelled words, Really needed a proof reader.
I don’t like to write bad reviews but I gave up on this book fairly quickly. I was not interested in the way the book was unfolding and the editor did a terrible job on the grammar and punctuation. I was so distracted by the grammar I gave up on reading it.
Good story line but way too many grammatical errors!
I’m reading it now..
The spelling was poor and many incorrect words. It appears that no one proof read this book prior to publishing.
This author is in bad need of a proofreader. The book was very difficult to get through with all of the mistakes. The storyline wasn’t bad but the errors were ridiculous.
Not a bad story but the editing was horrible and that kind of thing irritate me.
The story was good but whoever edited the book needs to go back to fifth grade to relearn grammar and spelling. Just awful
Great reading
Enjoyed the storyline but had issues with the grammatical and many spelling errors.
The plot was ok but it appeared composed by a voice-to-speech engine. General spelling and grammar errors and inappropriate word substitution, missing words made it difficult to follow. When an author talks about having multiple degrees, it is just an embarassment to the author to not pay attention to editing.
I hope that the sequels are better.
One star off for being mis-categorized: it is a relationship angst story, not a mystery or police procedural. The detective protagonist doesn’t solve anything except, eventually, her own family-history demons. Everything else just drops on her plate.
Another star off for being poorly written/edited: if typos and incorrect word choices and poor grammar and lousy punctuation bother you, stay away from this one. Reads like a second draft of a book that was written on a voice recorder – skipping the step of checking for garbled phrases and mis-transcribed words and changes of tense within sentences. grrr…
3rd star off for cookie-cutter villains and either unexplained or unbelievable motives for the bad guys.
I didn’t feel like it was going anywhere and stopped reading it.