I suppose it was an okay book but what bothered me was the switch in the prose: whose-eyes-are-we-seeing-the-world-through-now?I know it wasn't written in first person but it felt like a chunk of the book expressed things through Kelly's eyes, the killer's and the stalker's....the important people. And then the author gave us a glimpse into Monica's mind, who I really didn't care that much about. There was a whole sort of merry-go-round narrration going on that messed up everything for me. I guess I should find a review with spoilers that will tell me how the story went down.... Some time ago, Michelle Gagnon offered free downloads of this book from her website, and I took her up on it. I was finally able to get to it (library books come first), and it was great.In this second book in the Kelly Jones series, some hikers come across what turns out to be a mass grave in the woods. Because of the proximity to the Massachusetts-Vermont border, the FBI is called in to advise. The FBI is in the person of agent Kelly Jones, who is forced to postpone a long-awaited vacation to help on this case.Someone appears to have been targeting young gay men who are drifters, and therefore not missed when they disappear. Or is it two someones? The investigators are led to two bodies placed together, but they've definitely been killed by two different people. Is it a copycat, or two killers working together?Kelly is forced to deal with squabbling local police including uncooperative Massachusetts State Trooper Bill Doyle and eager-to-learn Vermont homicide detective Monica Lauer, as well as here own insecurities in order to discover the truth, which turns out to be even more disturbing than the investigators imagined.There are some graphic descriptions of torture, which I found difficult to read, but they are few and brief, and only used to advance the story. I skimmed them, not just because of their disturbing nature, but because I really wanted to know what happened.I'm definitely going to read Tunnels, the first in the series, and The Gatekeeper (the third).
Do You like book Joita Kukaan Ei Näe (2000)?
Good story but I wasn't overly impressed with the ending.
—Ryan
Graphic, but sophisticated and well written.
—shena