Okay, I RARELY leave a book unfinished and I read a LOT. That should attest to this book being pretty poorly written, because I just could not finish it. I made it a quarter of the way through, and that was more than enough.
Like the first book in the series, the author uses conversations - random, unrealistic and extremely long-winded conversations - to supposedly give back stories to the reader. Every. Single. Conversation. Even with her DOG. There is no way on earth anyone would give as many ridiculous details that barely pertain to any given topic as the conversations depicted in this book. Here is an example: a man who doesn't even remember who the protagonist is, brings two coffees in for her and his wife, who also barely knows her, and proceeds to not only say he can't join them because he's going to the rifle range, but goes on for FIVE pages about the problem he's having with the sights on his one rifle and how he has five rifles. Seriously. You'd think this is maybe to point out how the guy is rifle obsessed or something? But no. This is only one example of many, trust me. Every single time the protagonist is talking to someone it's the same thing, and she also constantly brings up things to people that they already know, just to ostensibly bring the reader up to date, I guess?
Don't even get me started about Doc and his lack of confidentiality. The protagonist asks him about confidentiality at one point and he tells her it's because the woman was in the waiting room when she told him and others also heard. And yet, he had told her two other things about other counselling patients already at that point. Also, he keeps telling Kelly not to get involved in more murders, and yet he comes to her with every single item of gossip or related information about the murder.
The characters and mysteries in this series are irritating and not interesting enough to keep me reading through this drivel.