I do not recall that I ever read any of Kay Hooper’s books in the past. This one called to me as I stood in the library carrels with exactly one minute to go before the library closed; I had already found that there were no books by the author I was looking for, so I reached up and grabbed this one. Although there is absolutely nothing in the publisher’s text inside or outside to reveal it, except that there is a small banner at the bottom of the front cover saying it is a Bishop/Special Crimes Unit novel, this turns out to be part of a 9-book series, and it was good enough that I’ll look for others in the series, which apparently are based on a storyline that there is a special section of the FBI consisting of agents who are psychics, who use their special abilities to solve crimes. This time there was no problem with reading an out-of-sequence novel, as this appears to be the only (or first) one dealing with the central character, one of the members of the unit, who is combining a well-earned vacation with a minor investigation of apparent occult happenings, which happens to be her specialty. While I am bad-mouthing the publisher (Bantam), let me point out that the cover illustration shows a blonde in bed, holding an automatic—which would be fine, except that the character happens to be black. Do publishers/illustrators/editors/proofreaders ever read what the produce?
There are several twists in this plot that make it interesting, in addition to the central theme of a psychic group of detectives. Unfortunately, I cannot talk too much about the story without giving away too much of the story involved in these twists. The major one, right from the first sentence, is that this particular psychic wakes up to find that she has lost her psychic ability and cannot remember what happened in the preceding three weeks of time. Being of stern stubbornness, however, she resolves to continue investigating whatever it was she was investigating, which leads her to new discoveries, including a lover she does not remember having met.
The ending seems a little abrupt, but it’s a good story and a good read.