It’s the summer before college and 17-year-old Thea Riggs is looking forward to some leisure time before going back to school. The last thing she expects is that she’ll get tangled up in a mysterious death. Her friend Lise Fenning invites Thea to her house but when she gets there, Lise is nowhere to be found. Instead, Thea finds an empty house and a dead body that bears a strong resemblance to Roberta Fenning, Lise’s mother. When she tries to call Lise, she gets the runaround. Upon closer examination, the crime scene feels like a setup, which makes Thea believe she is being framed for murder.
She reaches out to her best friend Fergus Wilde, who she has known since junior high, to help her make sense of the madness taking over her life. To make matters worse, someone is watching her every move and sending her threatening text messages. When she discovers the connection between the body and the internet game everyone’s playing, it becomes clear that she’s a major player and the next target of a secret crime syndicate. She knows too much and is in way over her head, but when they threaten her mother, she must act fast. Together with Fergus, their ‘fixer’ friend Kit Fury, and a kind Uber driver named Bharat, Thea must untangle the mysteries and the secrets surrounding a cold case tied to unethical scientific experiments and find some much-needed justice.
Thea Riggs is not just smart, she’s methodical and when she’s in a bind, she stops to assess the situation and make a plan. In “Specimen,” Lisa Towles gives readers an action-packed thriller that takes place in San Francisco and involves an internet puzzle game. The game designers post clues involving photos, links, and riddles and the more clues you solve, the more you level up. Rumor has it that it’s connected to a series of unsolved murders so that makes it even more enticing but dangerous. Thea becomes unwillingly involved in it and with danger all around her, has to think on her feet and trust her instincts, and her friends, to clear her name and find the truth once and for all.
I was drawn to this novel because I like mysteries and this one involves an internet game, so all the tech talk surrounding games, computers, and programming made it sound like fun. It’s suspenseful right from the start, with Thea finding a dead body and her reactions upon seeing the crime scene. She’s alone in a quiet house with Roberta Fenning’s bloody corpse and even though she knows she shouldn’t be there, she can’t help but calmly survey the scene. Until she hears a noise in the kitchen. By the end of the first chapter, I was hooked and wanted to keep reading to find out who killed Roberta and why.
I pressed my hands over my mouth to suppress the urge to call out to her, because it could also mean that her killer was down there waiting for me.
This mystery thriller expertly balances technology, science, suspense, and ethical dilemmas in a narrative that keeps readers engaged. The characters are deeply developed, especially Thea, whose personal struggles, narrated in the first-person point of view, add depth and make her relatable. Towles creates a tense atmosphere, with sharp prose and a well-paced narrative that draws the reader in:
I might never be able to unsee the ghoulish cast to her skin, and the way rigor mortis had frozen her contorted fingers into these spectral claws belonging in a zombie movie.
Overall, “Specimen” is a suspenseful mystery and technical thrill ride that explores the themes of family, friendship, power and corruption, and identity. It’s a fast easy read with short chapters and unexpected twists and turns. It is recommended for fans of James Rollins and Dan Brown who enjoy a mixture of mystery and technical storylines.
Tears now, the ones I’d been suppressing, filled my eyes so I couldn’t see without blinking, spilling them down my cheeks. I balled my hands into fists, digging my fingernails into the flesh of my palms to stop their flow, short circuit the emotions Jeffrey Dade seemed hellbent on releasing.