First Line: Police Chief Nalen Storrow found the dead girl lying faceup in a rust-colored runoff pond on the westernmost corner of Old Mo Heppenheimer’s cow pasture.
Category: Read in 2008
Two Little Girls in Blue by Mary Higgins Clark
First Line: “Hold on a minute, Rob, I think one of the twins is crying. Let me call you back.”
The Night Class by Tom Piccirilli
Copyright: 2002
Pages: 278
Rating: 1/5
Read: Jan. 9, 2008
Challenge: No challenge; personal read
First Line: Cal’s ethic’s class was enough to drive him to murder.
Caleb returns from winter break to find that a young woman was murdered in his dorm room. Not being able to get the answers he wants or needs, he sets out on his own to figure out what really happened. But in the process he will stumble upon things that will make him go mad.
I didn’t like this book at all. I didn’t understand what was going on half of the time. I still am not really sure what the ending was supposed to be. I was not at all impressed.
Deja Dead by Kathy Reichs
First Line: I wasn’t thinking about the man who’d blown himself up.
Laci by Michael Fleeman
Laci: Inside the Laci Peterson Murder
by Michael Fleeman
Copyright: 2003 – update 2004
Pages: 250
Rating: 3/5
Read: Jan. 4-5, 2008
Challenge: Triple Eight Challenge, True Crime category
First Line: ” ‘Hi, Mom.’ It was Scott Peterson on the line.
Michael Fleeman delves into the story of the Laci Peterson murder. In the short 250 pages the reader reads all the information that had already come out during the investigation itself. This book was a slight disappointment for myself. After reading Catherine Crier’s book, A Deadly Game and Sharon Rocha’s book, For Laci, this book was not up to par. There was no secret, hidden information like in Crier’s book. There was no heartrending, tear-jerking recollections like in Rocha’s book. This was just a straight repetition of the facts. It was dull in places, and never really grabbed my attention. For those who watched the events fold out on CourtTV and other stations, you already know everything in this book. It was just okay for me.
No Second Chance by Harlan Coben
Copyright: 2003
Pages: 420
Rating: 4/5
Read: Jan. 2-3, 2008
Challenge: Numbers Challenge; Celebrating the Author Challenge
First Line: When the first bullet hit my chest, I thought of my daughter.
Dr. Marc Seidman wakes up in the hospital to find that twelve days earlier his wife, Monica, was shot dead in their home, and their daughter, Tara, is missing. When the ransom note arrives, Marc’s hopes go through the roof. But when the drop goes bad, everything around him spirals out of control. Eighteen months later, another ransom note is delivered. Instead of contacting the police and doing the “right” thing, Marc takes matters into his own hands. With the assistance of his ex-girlfriend, they chase down the clues to Tara’s disappearance, only to realize that there’s more to the story than meets the eye.
This story was well plotted and fast paced. I was sucked in with the first sentence and could barely wait to figure out if Tara was still alive. The revelations at the end are shocking, to say the least. The ending came out of left field to me. This was only the second Co (the first I read years ago) and I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Objection! by Nancy Grace
Objection!: How High-Priced Defense Attorneys, Celebrity Defendants, and a 24/7 Media Have Hijacked Our Criminal Justice System
First Line: ” ‘I was just doing my job.’ That’s the tired excuse offered up by every defense attorney whenever they’re asked how they do what they do — how they pull the wool over jurors’ eyes to make sure the repeat offender they’re defending walks free.”
