I thought this book was horrible. However, to be fair, I didn't realize that it was "romantic suspense", which saved it from being a one star. I found the audio version on-line through my local library and downloaded it to my ipod. Based upon the brief review that the library network provided, the book sounded like a crime suspense novel focusing on the FBI's hunt for a serial killer crisscrossing the country taunting the agents with clues to the next victim.
So the story had such a good foundation-- it should have been great. The first couple of chapters were really good, tight, suspenseful, murders, mistaken identity, etc. THEN, sadly, it became not a suspense novel, but rather a story about Maddie Fitzgerald, with a little (very little) suspense thrown in for good measure. If I had wanted to read about Maddie and her fledgling advertising agency, I wouldn't have chosen a mystery novel. Add to that, a lot of the writing was just plain bad.
There were scenes that should have been suspenseful, i.e. Maddie and Sam (the FBI love interest) coming into Maddie's office on Monday morning to find the office deserted... where were the other employees? Killed? Kidnapped? This scene had real possibilities to be something, but no... they were hiding in Maddie's office to yell "Surprise!" "Congratulation on landing the Bremer account."
Dumb, dumb, dumb, the book was dumb. The only reason that I kept listening to it (way too long, by the way) was that I wanted to find out who the killer was. Even that was anticlimactic-- again, should have been great. There was a nice twist ending that wasn't developed at all. What should have been the climactic scene was over in about 30 seconds, moving back to Maddie, the ad agency, the Bremer account and Zelda, the pampered dog. By the last two hours or so of the audio book, I couldn't care less if Maddie got whacked, got it off with Sam, lost the the Bremer account, whatever.
Also, the narrator kept referring to the killer as the U N S U B, as in spelled out with initials, where as any fan of Criminal Minds knows, it is unsub, as in a word. In fact, I would love to see what Criminal Minds could do with the plot, and actually have them search for the killer, rather than focusing on Maddie and the stupid Bremer account.