Update 2 years after reading this originally - June 2024. I just finished Grant County and oh my! I will listen to this again to proceed with Will Trent. Cannot wait!
Listened for the second time, finishing 8/7/24. So good second time round, to recapture the scene, and especially, Will. He is the type of character I love to love, just like Myron Bolitar and Jack Reacher. There is a lot to look forward to right here!
I thoroughly enjoyed this audiobook, my first of Karin Slaughter. I have already been searching for the first of the Grant County books to learn more about Will Trent. I was fascinated by him, and his background, and in turn, the relationship between he and Angie.
The audio was quite formal, with an 'older' voice, which I found this extremely effective, with every scenario/male to female/tempo/emotion/tension/painful expression to be very well done. This was seamless and is what makes an audio experience an excellent one.
Will Trent, a highly functioning dyslexic, and agent for the Georgia Bureau of Investigation is a very closed off man who has to put extra hours into the job as he color-codes files, listens to audiobooks and has to work very hard to be able to fully grasp the written word. He is committed to this, and as always, I will want to see more as the series progress as I love a good character.
As always with a complex protagonist he has a past; he spent his early youth in a state home with Angie, who is one of the Detectives in Vice. Angie is troubled, and we see her coming and going from their personal relationship, she leaves him (and returns) more times than we could count. But Will is the good guy, the safe man who will allow this to happen.
The case is very gruesome, this is a book for those who don't mind very dark content; the violence in prison was very confronting, and not only this there was a lot of gritty content in general while Will is called in to assist a Detective Michael Ormewood in a string of serial killings dating back to the 1980's. There are more women being murdered, coinciding with the release of John Shelley who was incarcerated for over 20 years, and we are constantly trying to tie all these things together. The case doesn't seem to be progressing, and Will is sure to sort this out. Ormewood instantly defensive, spiteful and full of vitriol, we easily see who the bad guy is here.
The author drew these characters remarkably well, it was so easy to understand their motivations, I absorbed them all, despite the presence of a lot of evil.
I liked getting into Will's head and loved how he said very little when it came to Ormewood. He was an observer, I loved this as well.
The story is disturbing, very violent, but not only disturbing in these physical aspects but in those of people in power turning the cheek in very heinous crimes to advantage themselves with no regard for others. A great book because it raised my shackles many times.
I will now read Grant County to avoid spoilers and enjoy all there is from these characters. I am late to the party with this author, but that's ok. I have a tiny book problem anyway!