This book needs to be categorized as Christian fiction. Or, to be even more accurate, Christian romantic mystery. I read it thinking it was a regular mystery thriller, and it wasn't. Normally, this wouldn't really be a big deal, but in this case it was, and I'll explain why.
The book started out with an interesting premise. A woman is found having driven off a bridge and been killed. When Detective Adam Campbell and his dive team investigators are assigned to the case, they find suspicious circumstances -- it's possible the woman was actually killed before being placed in the car, and she was an accountant for a number of high-powered people. Adam's team calls in Dr. Sabrina Fleming, a cybersecurity and computer forensics expert.
Here's where things start to fall apart. First of all, Adam and Sabrina have a little history. They have been friends for a long time, but Adam has always had a thing for Sabrina and never let on, and Sabrina has always had a thing for Adam but never let on. This is all fine, no problem. But for over 100 pages, the book is basically just delving into this non-relationship relationship. I thought I was supposed to be reading a mystery thriller. The plot made almost no progress in the first 100 pages. But I was feeling generous. I realized I was actually reading a romantic mystery. Ok, I like romantic mysteries, I just had my expectations wrong. So no problem, let's keep going.
Now there are plot problems. Sabrina comes up with the wildest conclusions based on almost no evidence. She baffles those around her, and then she won't explain how she came up with her conclusions. I think the author intends for her to come across as some sort of eccentric genius (especially since she can't read people well), but it just comes across feeling preposterous. The plot feels as if it's written by someone who has zero experience in police work, computer forensics, or criminal investigation. It doesn't feel real or realistic.
Now to what I said at the beginning -- the fact that it bothers me that this is Christian fiction and not billed as such. Why did it bother me? Because the author just throws in random character thoughts about God and prayer, and it feels gratuitous, like she felt obligated to throw these things in in order to keep it Christian. Whereas other authors' books may include gratuitous sex, this book includes gratuitous "God-isms," and I find it off-putting and almost offensive. And I'm Christian. The religious references aren't preachy, but they simply don't fit, are superfluous, and should just be edited out. They disrupt the flow of the writing, so what's the point?
So with all the above problems, by the time I got to page 106 I started skimming really fast. I didn't want to read any more, but I was obligated to finish the book because I received an ARC. To be fair to the publisher and the author, I needed to read the whole thing before giving it a review. But it was difficult for me to finish; I really disliked the book, and it was all the more disappointing because it had so much potential.