
It’s RomCom with a side of suspense, or suspense with a side of RomCom. I think fans of the Stephanie Plum series (like me) will love this one. This was kind of a return to the humor that’s closer to the Blue Moon series, but not exactly. She has such a variety of styles and tropes. This isn’t a typical Lucy Score book, but that’s one of the many reasons I love her writing. I would have rather had a duet, but still great. All before the killer discovers she’s a loose end that requires snipping. Only because he likes solving mysteries not because he wants to flex his heroic muscles for the damsel in distress.Īll they have to do is figure out who pulled the trigger, keep the by-the-book detective with a grudge at bay, and deal with a stranger claiming he was sent to help Riley hone her psychic gifts. When the pretty, possibly psychic Riley lands at the top of the list of suspects, Nick volunteers to find out whodunit.

He’s a rebel, a black sheep, a man who prefers a buffet of options to being stuck with the same entrée every night, if you catch his drift. Unless the “others” are of the female persuasion.

Nick Santiago doesn’t play well with others. Just when things can’t get worse, a so-hot-it-should-be-illegal private investigator shows up on her doorstep looking for a neighbor.who turns up murdered. And those hallucinations she’s diligently ignoring? Her tarot card-dealing mom is convinced they’re clairvoyant visions. Is that too much to ask? For Riley Thorn it is.ĭivorced.
