The Black Stiletto must be one of the most unique characters introduced within the last few years, presented in such a unique manner. The book and the series deserves the high rating for the entertainment value alone.
In Secrets & Lies, the fourth installment of a planned five-book series, we find Judy Cooper making the transition from New York to Los Angeles, and blooming into a truly independent woman. I commend author Raymond Benson for his ability to give voice to Judy through her diaries as a young woman in the early 1960s as she matures and deals with the changing moralities of her generation. Once again involved with a shady love interest, Judy struggles to maintain her balance between some newly-found respectability and the excitement and attention she craves; between her public life and her dangerous, secret identity.
Part of why Benson succeeds with this series is his unique device of managing multiple, interrelated story-lines. Judy's past as told through her diary; her son, Martin, discovering his Mother's secrets while dealing with her Alzheimer's Disease and the consequences of her past life, as well as his own personal issues and demons. Then there is Martin's daughter who may well have some of the same abilities and inclinations as her grandmother.
Many of the questions raised in the earlier installments of this series begin to be addressed in Secrets & Lies. My only disappointment with this book is that, having completed the book, I now have to wait for the full story to be told in the fifth and final (?) installment due later this year.