While vacationing in Hawaii, FBI pathology expert Jessica Coran joins the search for a serial killer who preys on young Hawaiian women, and finds herself drawn into the Hawaiian underworld. By the author of Fatal Instinct. Original.
Aka Geoffrey Caine, Glenn Hale, Evan Kingsbury, Stephen Robertson
Master of suspense and bone-chilling terror, Robert W. Walker, BS and MS in English Education, Northwestern University, has penned 44 novels and has taught language and writing for over 25 years. Showing no signs of slowing down, he is currently juggling not one but three new series ideas, and has completed a film script and a TV treatment. Having grown up in Chicago and having been born in the shadow of the Shiloh battlefield, near Corinth, Mississippi, Walker has two writing traditions to uphold--the Windy City one and the Southern one--all of which makes him uniquely suited to write City for Ransom and its sequels, Shadows in White City and City of the Absent. His Dead On will be published in July 2009. Walker is currently working on a new romantic-suspense-historical-mainstream novel, titled Children of Salem. In 2003 and 2004 Walker saw an unprecedented seven novels released on the "unsuspecting public," as he puts it. Final Edge, Grave Instinct, and Absolute Instinct were published in 2004. City of the Absent debuted in 2008 from Avon. Walker lives in Charleston, West Virginia.
WAY too long... if you want a murder mystery wrapped up in an apparent book about the history of Hawaii, then this is it. If you just want to story without all the history, skip this one.
This book is less about a serial killer and more about “a complete history of Hawaii.” Much of the color text could (and should) have gone out the window and shaved about 100 pages off. The wheels completely came off about three quarters of the way through. Coran’s and Parry’s characterizations completely failed in my opinion. Jessica argued like a hamfisted dude.
I would have rated this book more 3 to 3.5 stars if it hadn't been for the ending. At times the book seemed to lag because of all the flashbacks and recounts of things that happened in previous books but the author had a way of decsribing Hawaii that made me wish I was there. And when he got to the meat of the story I was hooked. My biggest critique was that I wished the book was written in a faster pace.
Wow was not expecting this to be so good. Found in free library. This one intrigued me from the start. A very jolting and page turning read. Surprised by the lower rating, definitely an underrated gem.