Every once in awhile I decide to read a J.A. Jance mystery because most of her mysteries are set where I live, Cochise County Arizona. I haven't liked all of the Joanna Brady series--sometimes the books focus too much on her domestic affairs--but I definitely enjoyed this one.
First, the mystery is very good. Who killed Debra Highsmith, Bisbee High School's principal? The murder occurs right at the beginning of the book, the killing is particularly mean. What did Debra do to deserve to be shot in the desert, left to die? Brady, who is Sheriff of Cochise County, is called in by none other than her teenaged daughter, who comes across the body while she is out riding. Said daughter takes a photo of the body and posts it on social media! Right away, we have modern life intruding on standard police procedure. Later, it emerges that Debra was being trolled by an angry student on social media, her photo published with "Die Bitch" as a banner. Social media plays a large part in this book, as it seems to be doing in so many mysteries I have read lately.
Living in Cochise, I could easily picture the area where the murder took place and Bisbee, the town where the rest of the action occurs, is a favorite hangout of mine. Jance does a very good job of describing Bisbee although I do think she ought to have used Bisbee Coffee Co.'s cafe . . . great place for breakfast! I haven't lived in Cochise County long enough, however, to fully understand the role that the copper mine played in Bisbee's history; it was interesting to read one of the side stories and understand what made Bisbee the quirky, slightly shabby, town that it is.
I enjoyed how Jance was able to describe so much about the characters, their lives, their foibles, events like a local Plein Air course (quite familiar with those in the Southwest), without taking away from the investigation, from the mystery. I wondered, when we discovered the way that the murderer scoped out his prey, whether she was a little too far fetched. But maybe that's wishful thinking--I sure hope no one in MY past is tracking me this way! Because social media IS becoming a mainstay in mystery novels, Jance might want to vet her book for whether she is "using" it correctly. People post on Twitter, they don't really use it for text messaging. I don't know of any teen that would let a nosy aunt take over their Facebook account. Small details, things that people who are savvy about social media, (not that I count myself among them, reference whether I believe the murderer's stalking) will notice.
Still in my opinion, it was a satisfying, if long (426 pages in paperback), read. There was a twist at about page 350, just when you think the mystery part of the book is done. That was strange--who suddenly introduces a mystery at the END of a book? Especially when it wasn't a cliffhanger. After taking 350 pages to solve the main mystery, this second one is cleared up in 76 pages. Odd.