I always think of a mystery novel as a chance to match wits with the author. Can I easily discern the culprit? I usually judge the quality of the story by how close I get to the end of the book before I solve the mystery. There was no chance of that in this story. Turn off your deductive reasoning; there is no well placed path of clues here. Even if you hazard a guess, it would be just that, a guess and you're just as likely to be wrong as you are right.
This seems to be the trend in mystery writing lately. Agatha Christie is dead and so is her brand of mystery. Realism is what it's all about now, chasing down criminals, interviewing suspects and witnesses, and feeling like a cop from the safety of your home. The way these authors entice a fan base is through suspense and the clever trap they contrive to expose the true murderer.
The storyline is pretty good, although I think I'm getting tired of characters in novels always being superheroes. Why can't a normal person be thrown into the wake of injustice, make mistakes, atone, and still come out on top? I mean really, never eating sugar, working out until you collapse to solve the crime, do real people do this?
There are two short sexual sentences in this book, and that is the whole of the sexual encounters we graphically read about. Even then, it's not decisively explicit. That being said, sex is a major theme in this novel. Innuendo is always there, above and beyond the necessary plot component. It's amazing that placing arousing commentary in every chapter can actually amount to a powerful theme in a novel, but it really does.
There is one sexual component that I didn't find believable. Our heroine is portrayed as virginal, having a three year relationship without any sex, not even after they're engaged. Then, after a whirlwind week, she's ready to jump into bed with a man and then some? It was completely inconsistent in her character, and it was not explained by her inner monologue even in part.
In the last few years, there have been some immensely popular novels that have come out preaching abstinence. The shock to the literary world was that they were number one on the best-sellers list. This novel really felt like a partial reform. The author saw the monetary basis for leaving sexual content out, but just really couldn't leave it out.