Cal Randall and his new partner are on the tracks of the infamous "PK" - "Profession Killer" - who is after women all over Minneapolis, slowly working his way through the alphabet with their profession's first letters. Abby is a dietitian, at the beginning still joking about being in a boring profession, one that easily gets overlooked - until she's not.
This book was okay - it had good parts and parts that left you questioning why they were necessary (I get it, Abby experienced abuse as a child, I didn't need it on page, especially since it honestly didn't add much, it was just.. There) or how they're possible (without giving anything away - where did all that money come from?). It's a thriller, so gore is to be expected and it's there, what Abby gets to see.. I don't envy her for it.
The plot is alright - there's tension, there's that rush you'd want with a police procedural, there's the connections to all of the different characters, the mystery.. I like how the element of stress was woven into the story, police needs to solve the case quickly because the consequences would mean one more funeral and you really do feel the pressure. I was a little disappointed in the ending though; not the epilogue, but that final action scene. Everything got set up for a grand finale and it barely got any mentions at all, I guess here I would've liked a little bit more of that gore we previously got a lot of. Then there's the epilogue and heh.. What can I say. I appreciate that little final kick but that other scene felt like it needed work and made the whole thing fall a little flat.
The writing is great. Straight up, nothing to add, it's just easy to read, the story is easy to follow, the sentences flow so well, you can't just sit down and read a few pages, no you're going for an hour. And you won't even notice it. This is something very important for me in a book and it was done so well here, I'm actually interested in checking out the author's other works; with those writing skills they can only be great reads!
There's multiple point of views in this book and they're all done so well that it's easy to differentiate between who is who - you don't get an intro telling you who you're with now, no, it's just a few sentences and you see what's going on and how it can only be this person or another. Very well done, especially since the different views are interesting here - you get the best effect out of the respective viewpoint and that way it kind of adds to the story without for example some scenes being overly gore-y.
Overall, an okay read, I had a good time, I felt the action at the end, the rush, the stress on all sides, but there's things that could have been fleshed out better.
Thank you Jacob Moon and NetGalley for providing this book for review consideration via NetGalley. All opinions are my own.