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April Woo #5

Stealing Time

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Leslie Glass is back...with a terrific new mystery featuring NYPD homicide detective April Woo. In Stealing Time, she's caught between powerhouse politics and a troubled conscience when a brutal crime is committed in the heart of her own Chinese-American community. The most challenging case of her career makes for the most provocative mystery of the year. "Leslie Glass is Lady McBain."-- Michael Palmer"Leslie Glass is one terrific writer."-- Tami Hoag Stealing Time "Truly fantastic."-- New York Post"Skillfull...Compelling."-- Dallas Morning News"Exciting."-- Kirkus Reviews"Involving."-- Publishers Weekly"Masterful."-- Booklist"I'll drop what I'm doing to read Leslie Glass anytime."-- Nevada Barr"Gripping psychological drama."-- Publishers Weekly"Complex insights...deft plotting and strong characterizations."-- Library Journal"If you're a Thomas Harris fan...looking for a new thriller to devour, you'll find it in ... Leslie Glass."-- Sun-Sentinel, (FL)

340 pages, Hardcover

First published February 1, 1999

11 people are currently reading
158 people want to read

About the author

Leslie Glass

49 books41 followers
LESLIE GLASS's new book, the Mother Daughter Relationship Makeover is a memoir and exploration of the issues that drive mothers and daughters (and also sons) apart. Her experience as founder and editor of Reach Out Recovery, the online wellness and recovery magazine, inspired her to move beyond her beloved April Woo mystery series and focus on helping people by writing recovery books for people of all ages. Since 2011, she has produced two award winning documentaries, The Secret World of Recovery, and The Silent Majority and developed a website with followers from all over the globe wanting to know more about addiction, recovery, relationships, and health. Reach Out Recovery has more than 1500 original articles.

In her early career Leslie worked in publishing and has written for a variety of media. She was a journalist at New York magazine and a short-story and feature writer for Cosmopolitan and Woman’s Own in Great Britain. A playwright and the author of the critically acclaimed mystery series featuring NYPD Detective Sergeant April Woo, Glass is also the author of Over His Dead Body, Sleeper, The Teen Guide to Health, Find Your True Colors in 12 Steps, The 8 C's That Help Me Be All Right.
She lives in Sarasota, Florida.

Series
* April Woo Mystery

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5 stars
61 (18%)
4 stars
157 (48%)
3 stars
88 (27%)
2 stars
16 (4%)
1 star
2 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews
Profile Image for Alton Motobu.
729 reviews3 followers
June 21, 2025
More character study of Chinese-American women and their mothers than a murder mystery. Four young Chinese-American women in New York City - detective April Woo, her friend Nanci, Nanci's cousin, Lin, and Heather - come together when Lin gives birth, doesn't want the baby, tries to give him to Heather, who gives him back, and Nanci ends up with him. All complicated when Heather is beaten, the baby is kidnapped, and Lin is murdered. Meanwhile all of these women have mothers who see their daughters as mere tools to make them look good so people will think they are such great models of motherhood. The book is filled with sickening acts committed by the mothers to enhance their reputations, not to help, to care about, or to enhance their daughters'. April finds the kidnapped baby and solves the murder case, but she ends up wondering if her mother tried to poison her.
Profile Image for Mad Leon.
190 reviews1 follower
May 14, 2021
My 4th April Woo novel. Missed the first entry and since the plot was mentioned in subsequent books I saw no point in going back for the read. This entry in the series involves the disappearance of a wealthy couple's baby. I didn't find the mystery very interesting but that seems to be the general problem in all the books of the series. The characters drive the story and keep me interested and in this book there were a ton of new detectives and perps, so many that I sometimes was confused about who was who. I'm still hopeful that April will eventually develop the ability to stand up to tough criticism. At least she and Mike finally are together, just wish there was more about them as a couple or as a investigative team. That's what makes the book.
Profile Image for Rogue Reader.
2,314 reviews7 followers
December 21, 2023
Abuse of women immigrants with few resources who are reluctant to engage the police. The intersection of two, three or more cultures is confusing and engaging, a complex layering of expectations, guilt, privilege and fear. Stealing time from another's life, from one's own.
Profile Image for Sandy.
1,401 reviews6 followers
July 31, 2017
It was OK. If I saw another on any of my book offers for free Kindle I would read more.
43 reviews
August 17, 2018
A really good read

Kept me guessing and actually caring about the outcome. I don’t understand the Chinese way of thinking but found it interesting to consider.
Profile Image for Wendy.
307 reviews6 followers
July 10, 2016
I gave this book two stars instead of one, because I did manage to actually finish this. There is nothing spectacularly bad about the writing, nothing writing-wise that was irritating. But I found the depiction of April's mother and the other Chinese women not just irritating, but ridiculous and offensive. Mainly this occurs within dialogue. When immigrants speak another language, they are going to have errors and mistakes, and people from different countries will have different sentence structure. I get that. But when the immigrants start speaking in their native language, must their grammar still be stilted and make them sound like they don't know how to speak any language? What is that about?

The horrors visited on the young immigrant Lin, and her dreadful life, are the most compelling thing about this novel. She is really the only character who doesn't feel like an outline of a person; she feels fully human. Perhaps I would understand more about April and her background, perhaps she would feel more whole, if I had read this series from the beginning. On the other hand, by the time you get to #5 in a series, the character should really feel like a whole person and not just a cutout. I didn't hate April, I even empathized with her to a small degree, but mostly, like the other characters, she just feels like a placeholder. She is there to move a plot along, not to be a fully-realized person.

I can't recommend this book.
306 reviews12 followers
February 10, 2010
Chinese detective April Woo is investigating the disappearance of a baby, whose adoptive parents become suspected. The husband is linked to an illegal alien who works in his relatives' company. It's all very complicated, fast-paced, confusing, and well-written. April's mother is especially maddening because she has no understanding of her daughter's life or career and screeches at her daughter, and is a huge racist. A very satisfying book.
Profile Image for Eunira.
261 reviews8 followers
February 1, 2011
Found this somewhat battered copy in a ubs in Curitiba, but as I'd never read a book by Leslie Glass and the price was minimal, brought it home with me. I think that if I had read the series in order I'd have enjoyed this one more.
Profile Image for Estibaliz.
2,548 reviews71 followers
December 16, 2012
Puntuación real, 2 1/2, pero me ha parecido que puntuar con tres quizá sería un poco exagerado, pues me ha parecido una buena novela dentro del género, entretenida y de fácil lectura, pero tampoco excesivamente original o destacable.
Profile Image for Juan Rodriguez.
10 reviews
November 1, 2015
Good read. It wasn't quite a page turner except when the baby was involved. The hero's mom was a bellyful of laughs. The repartee between the lovers was too close for comfort for an old romantic. The brothers certainly were the kind of baddies one loves to hate. Very satisfying overall.
558 reviews1 follower
August 22, 2011
Whodunnit, mystery, police story with a special twist that made it very different from the usual stuff. Well written and it had that page turner draw making it an easy and fairly quick read.
48 reviews
May 28, 2012
First read for this author. Not bad it was a good who dunnit.
351 reviews
November 11, 2016
This is the first Leslie Glass book that I have read and I will read others. Very good mystery.
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews

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