A riveting book full of art, lies, and death.
Patricia Fisher is at it again. Back on the cruise ship Aurelia, with her Captain boyfriend, Alistair Huntley, and her good friends Barbie, and Jermaine and her assistant Sam,
Patricia is in the thick of things once more, getting herself in a tizzy with this case.
It had been suggested to the owners of the Aurelia; the Purple Star Cruise Liner company; that a position of ships detective should be created for Patricia. As a test of her skill, the Purple Star company have asked that Patricia discover the where abouts of inventory that is disappearing from the Aurelia with alarming regularity.
Patricia easily sorts this mystery out, catching the guilty member of the crew red handed, but then, just as everyone is celebrating the successful closing of the case, Patricia is approached by two members of the Aurelia's security team. They inform her of the apparent suicide of a passenger and explain that although it appears that the young lady did in fact kill herself; they felt uneasy about the case and they felt a new set of eyes would see what they may have missed.
Patricia gets down to work immediately; trying to discover what happened to the beautiful young woman.
It's a very complicated case that has many ins and outs with twists that go off in all different directions.
I love Patricia's dogged determination and her confidence about what had occurred. She is awesome at finding out who did what to whom and when and why.
This book was riveting and I didn't want to put it down, which is generally the case when I read this authors works. It's got such a strong character in the artist; he grabbed my attention and kept it to the end.
This story was a brilliant mystery and had fantastic imagery and with the backdrop being the Aurelia Cruise Liner, it was wonderful.
I always enjoy Steve Higgs books, but I just wish they were a lot longer; they are such fully satisfying reads that I find myself thinking about them for days after.