First Line: The thing that finally nudged Agatha Raisin into opening her own detective agency was what she always thought of as the Paris Incident.
Category: RATING
Johnny Angel by Danielle Steel
First Line: The sun was shining brightly on a hot June day in San Dimas, a somewhat distant suburb of L.A.
Blood Brothers by Nora Roberts
First Line: It crawled along the air that hung heavy as wet wool over the glade.
Mary Mary by James Patterson
First Line: Act one, scene one, the Storyteller thought to himself, and couldn’t hold back a dizzying rush of anticipation.
Raise the Titanic! by Clive Cussler
First Line: The man on Deck A, Stateroom 33, tossed and turned in his narrow berth, the mind behind his sweating face lost in the depths of a nightmare.
The Woods by Harlan Coben
First Line: I see my father with that shovel.
The Widow by Carla Neggers
First Line: Abigail Browning squirted charcoal lighter fluid on the mound of papers she’d torn up and piled into her backyard grill.
Marker by Robin Cook
First Line: In the wee hours of February 2, a cold, steady drizzle drenched the concrete spires of New York City, shrouding them in a dense swirl of purplish-pink fog.
Mistaken Identity by the Van Ryn & Cerak Families
First Line: Colleen Cerak woke up with a start to the sound of the phone ringing.
“Okay, Laura, I would like for you to write your name for me, the occupational therapist said. … W-H-I-T-N-E-Y…” (pg. 165-167)
“We have reason to believe that the girl identified as Laura Van Ryn is, in fact, your daughter Whitney Cerak.” (pg. 3)
The Inferno Collection by Jacqueline Seewald
First Line: “May I help you?” Kim Reynolds said the words automatically to the next person who approached the information services desk as she replaced the World Almanac under the ready reference counter.

