I have yet to find a book by J.A. Jance that was not well worth the reading. It is escape fiction, perhaps, but it is good escape fiction, with a generally interesting cast of fully understandable characters involved in a complex plot that gives us understanding of how these people interact with what is going on around them to the extent that we can determine whether we might or would want to act that way, too. Isn‘t that what learning is all about? In addition, I am always eager to see how successful authors work out their plots—and with more than 27 best-selling novels to her credit, J.A. Jance certainly is a successful author.
This is actually the fourth book in a series featuring Ali Reynolds, now an ex-television journalist, who has come back to her home town in Sedona, Arizona, which was also the locale of at least the two previous books in the series, none of which I have read, unfortunately. The relationship she had established with Dave Holman, the Sedona detective who proved her innocence when she was accused of having murdered her second husband, has cooled off somewhat--or rather, put somewhat on hold , as Dave has been custody of his two daughters and they seem to be consuming much of whatever free time he has from the detecting business. Meanwhile, Ali’s grown son, Chris, a teacher in the local elementary school, is living with her--but he is getting ready to marry Athena, another teacher in his school. At the same time, Ali has purchased a crumbling mansion, which she is busy restoring, with the hope that she can move into it by Thanksgiving, leaving the upscale mobile home (which boasts a studio basement) she inherited from her aunt to Chris and Athena … with that restoration, which is actually being done by a local contractor, Bryan Forester and his crew, under the watchful eye of Leland Brooks, a diminutive and elderly gentleman who has been having a homosexual relationship with the local judge for some years, and who apparently used to be the butler for one of the now-departed characters in a previous novel in the series, and who has adopted the idea of helping Ali get over her depression as his new hobby. Is the scene all set? Not quite: you also need to know that Ali’s parents own and operate the only good café in town (which is not the way I remember Sedona, a beautiful small city surrounded by an even more beautiful desert), with both of them being characters in their own right.
Along comes Peter Winter, a doctor down in Phoenix, who has two hobbies. One hobby is operating a somewhat raunchy Internet dating service, named Singleatheart, which is aimed to appeal to people who are not happy with their married state. His second hobby is beguiling lonely housewives among his clientele who look like his deceased wife--and then killing them, as he did her, as well as his mother. In this particular case, his newest victim, done away with in the prologue, is Morgan Forester, Bryan’s wife, and he is increasing his entertainment in the process by trying to get the murder blamed on someone else whose identity he has stolen by means of the online dating service records. Would you believe that all this is in the prologue to the book?
The rest of the book, of course, involves Ali’s escapades, as her detective boyfriend sets out to pin the murder on Bryan, which means that her new house will not be ready for the Thanksgiving feast, which causes Ali to try to figure out for herself what the true story is, which means that she gets involved with the Singleatheart dating service, bringing her to the attention of the murderous doctor, who sets out to take care of her but finds that the person at home is not Ali but little Leland Brooks, who just happened to have served in Her Majesty’s Royal Marines when he was younger. Meanwhile, Ali has found additional help in the form of a geeky recluse who also has moved back to Sedona after making his fortune in clandestine Internet activities in the outside world, who just happens to know exactly how to hack into the Singlesatheart data network. There are a half dozen other interesting characters who appear during the book, also, each with their own set of problems and promises, but I think I’ve given you enough to go on without spoiling the plot, which twists and turns, as all of J.A. Jance’s plots do.