The story was fairly solid and intriguing, if not very unique.
There are two lines here. One is a long, continuing thread of tragedy and fear, suffered but survived by the main character. It's a bit far-fetched, especially that her mom's killer was "mistakenly released." Got to be a better way of presenting why he's on the loose and after her again. The situation is explained throughout the current saga, tho, and the author does a good job of filling us in without giving so many details we lose interest. I assume there's another book about that?
The author also does a good job of introducing the book's main theme, the murder of a husband. It happens to not only be the second husband, of the same woman, who's been violently murdered, but one of a few husbands in the same family who'd suffered this fate. The storylines interweave pretty smoothly. At one point, tho, the main story goes into unbelievable mode, and it never comes back. Too many smart investigators fall into the murderer's traps, too many convenient getaways, just lazy writing to wrap things up.
There are some places where the author intrigues us with the possibility of old curses taking their course, and that panning out would have made the downhill to the end way more cohesive and interesting. As things wrap up, the whole storyline gets thrown at us in that lazy way too many authors end their novels-one or two characters finally talk in depth, and reveal "what they knew," and it all just funnels to an unsatisfying, predictable end. It doesn't come off as skilled writing, giving us details. We You end wondering how no one had ever, over years of murders and rumors, put any of the pieces together before, because it wasn't that hard...
The narrators voices were amateurish, annoying. Bad accents and affects throughout, many mispronunciations--very, very hard to follow, listen to, or take seriously.