This first portion of my review does not contain spoilers. Please do not read beyond the bolded comments below if you don't wish to be spoiled on the ending.
I really enjoyed this book. The mystery element is solid and when the point-of-view switches to the killer, it is creepy, frequently gross, and thoroughly engrossing. I think this book would have suffered without the reader being able to get an understanding of the killer’s mindset and his “victims”. Oddly enough, sometimes I understood the killer’s motivations more so than the main character, Hazel. I also should note that I loved DC Wingate from his introduction onward. I truly hope in the future that the author switches to his POV more often. With the other characters, I’m curious to see where Wolfe will go with Sevigne (spelling is probably wrong – I was listening to an audiobook).
Aside from the issues I have listed below, I am looking forward to the next book about Hazel and crew. :)
Unfortunately, the reason why this book received four stars instead of the five I planned to give it contains MAJOR SPOILERS ABOUT THE CONCLUSION OF THE BOOK. Please do not read on if you do not want the end of this book spoiled for you!
Consider yourself warned…
1st Issue: A side note that bothered me… The killer puts Hazel in the backseat of his car (probably a Cavalier since that is the last vehicle he was driving), hand-cuffed and in the middle seat. She enrages him, he speeds up and then swerves to the shoulder and brakes hard. Hazel’s head smacks the side window hard enough to hurt her. Is this even possible from the middle seat? I just can’t see someone hitting the side window when buckled in to the middle seat. ‘Course, I could very easily be wrong, but it was just another thing that didn’t seem right.
2nd Issue: The way that the killer kills himself after a short bit of time with Hazel just didn’t seem like something his character would’ve done. It felt very abrupt, out of character, and promptly pulled me out of the story to do a “WTF?”. He has trudged on even though his body is eating itself from malnourishment, but a few words from Hazel has him convinced that his whole mission was in vain and the answer is to blow his head off? This disappointed me greatly… I could’ve foreseen a big, drag out fight between the injured Hazel and ill killer, or him just dropping dead because of the wasted condition of his body, or perhaps he goes to jail, but to kill himself, nope, don’t buy it.
3rd Issue: And lastly, Hazel takes the killers body and stuffs it in the trunk of the car she uses to drive back to town. Isn’t this a big no-no? Disturbing the crime scene and all? I get that at that point she had broken a lot of procedural laws during the course of the investigation, but I really don’t get why she took the body back with her. Couldn’t she have just directed the investigators back to the scene to retrieve the body?