Terri Blackstock has been a banner name in Christian fiction for over twenty years. I’ve found some of her books riveting and some of her books lacking. Recently, I decided to go back to some of her older books that I’d never read and see how her stories and writing style had changed and progressed. I started with Newpointe 911, a five-book series published between 1998-2003, that focuses on a group of first responders, their families, and way more drama than you’d expect from a small town.
In Private Justice, we were introduced to the small town of Newpointe, Louisiana, and its emergency workers. In that book, Detective Stan Shepherd was the one who cracked the case and hunted down the killer. In Shadow of Doubt, he’s the one being targeted. Worse, his wife Celia is the prime suspect.
The police do have their reasons. Stan’s been poisoned with arsenic and Celia’s first husband was murdered by arsenic poisoning. Not only that, but Celia had been arrested for the murder before getting off on a technicality. She moved to Newpointe, where nobody knew her, fell in love with Stan, and started her life over.
As Stan clings to life, Celia desperately protests her innocence. Unfortunately, the facts keep lining up against her. It’s all circumstantial, but it’s quite compelling (almost too compelling, one might think). The drama over the false accusation is compelling, but the police work is bumbling at best. The mystery isn’t as compelling because we know it wasn’t Celia and Blackstock offers no great alternatives until the book’s end—which is when things really get wild.
Things come to a head when Celia tries to sneak into Stan’s room to see him. She’s caught. And *gasp* it’s discovered that someone put arsenic in Stan’s IV bag. Stan insists it wasn’t Celia. Celia insists it wasn’t her. But it’s not exactly a good look for the suspected murderer to visit the victim and then the victim almost die again.
Celia is her own worst enemy at every turn, withholding information, acting incriminatingly, refusing to cooperate with the investigation. The police are less-than-competent, jumping to conclusions and refusing to consider alternatives. (But you know, that part might be accurate.) It moves the plot along, but it’s an incredibly frustrating read. Blackstock makes it so obvious to the readers that when the characters don’t pick up on it, you have to assume they’re a bit dense.
The plot to uncover the real killer is absolutely bonkers non-sensical. I was willing to say that this book was just average and a product of its time until this twist. Spoilers ahead. Celia is imprisoned, but they think they have a sure-fire way of testing to see if she’s the real killer: let her go and either she’ll try to kill Stan again or the real killer will try to set her up for the murder. They can’t just release an alleged killer for no reason, so they arrange for Aunt Aggie, Celia’s aunt, to fake her death so that Celia can petition to attend the funeral. (Aggie has been an important background character in the series.) They’ll monitor Stan and catch whoever tries to kill him in the act.
Somehow this works. The real killer—Celia’s brother, jealous because Celia was always the favorite—attempts to kill Stan one more time, setting Celia up once again to take the fall. Except…why would he try to murder Stan again if his motive is simply sending Celia to prison? She’s already assumed guilty. It baffles the mind. It’s a low-budget soap opera twist and it’s just silly.
This one was my least favorite of the five Newpointe books. Most of them are just mediocre, but this one was actually bad.