I have read a few by Lisa Jackson, usually when I'm in the mood for something distracting and not too challenging, and I have to say that I have found them uneven. She's a NYT bestselling author and gets rave blurbs for her cover from the likes of Harlan Coben, so maybe it's me, but I found myself tapping my foot with impatience while reading this--not a good sign. There is a fair amount of repetition and some pointless explication, and her language choices sometimes irritate me. For instance, instead of Aunty-Pen narrowing her eyes, she "thinned" her eyes. Maybe Jackson's just trying to be original, but this is not the proper usage of "thinned." She did this several times that I remember, and each time it pulled me right out of the story.
She did surprise me when it came to "whodunnit," but there were too many red herrings, the pursuit of the case by the police wasn't very logical, and the initial dogged insistence by one of the detectives that someone had to have done the crime, despite the almost complete lack of convincing evidence, was pretty unbelievable. I found her main protagonist (a newspaper reporter/true crime writer) kind of annoying and didn't believe she would make the decisions she made, given her past. All in all, I could have spent my Sunday afternoon better.