Last to Die: A Rizzoli & Isles Novel
Last to Die: A Rizzoli & Isles Novel book cover

Last to Die: A Rizzoli & Isles Novel

Hardcover – August 28, 2012

Price
$10.79
Format
Hardcover
Pages
352
Publisher
Ballantine Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0345515636
Dimensions
6.5 x 1 x 9.5 inches
Weight
1.25 pounds

Description

From Author Tess Gerritsen: Why I Wrote Last To Die When I was ten years old, I got a fingerprint kit for my birthday. I'd been obsessed with Nancy Drew mystery novels, and I was convinced that I, too, could be a spunky girl detective and track down all the dangerous criminals lurking in my suburban San Diego neighborhood. The fingerprint kit consisted of a brush and a baggie of black powder. I practiced by dusting various surfaces in my house, blowing off the excess powder, and using Scotch tape to capture the patterns. I never nabbed any dangerous criminals, but I did discover the interesting fact that fingerprint powder is really hard to clean off white walls and furniture. Thus ended my career as spunky girl detective. The years passed and I grew up to become a doctor and then a thriller novelist, but I never forgot my childhood fantasy of being a crime-fighter. I realize now that it was a variation of a universal fantasy we all share: that even ordinary people can do extraordinary things. It's a theme we see often in fiction and in movies: Harry Potter, the despised boy living under the stairs, becomes the world's greatest wizard. Luke Skywalker, a farm boy, becomes a Jedi knight. So why couldn't a mere kid help catch a criminal? In my newest novel Last to Die , that's exactly what happens. It's the tenth in my Rizzoli and Isles crime series starring homicide detective Jane Rizzoli and medical examiner Maura Isles. This time they're on the hunt for a killer who's stalking three surviving orphans of different family massacres. Assisting Jane and Maura are a few brilliant young sleuths who belong to The Jackals, a student forensics club at the remote and mysterious Evensong boarding school. The three threatened orphans--Claire, Will, and Teddy--are now sheltered at Evensong, where frightening new events at the school make Jane Rizzoli wonder if the killer has tracked the orphans to the isolated sanctuary that was supposed to keep them safe. But Evensong is no ordinary school, and Evensong's students are certainly not ordinary children. Among the students is sixteen-year-old Julian "Rat" Perkins, who saved Maura's life in my book Ice Cold . xa0As president of The Jackals Club, Julian leads this oddball group of amateur detectives, and they have more than a few tricks up their sleeves--tricks that may save the lives of Jane and Maura. I never fulfilled my childhood fantasy of being a girl sleuth who catches bad guys. But I can finally bring that fantasy to life in Last to Die, where it just might be the kids who bring down the killer. PRAISE FOR TESS GERRITSEN “Suspense doesn’t get smarter than this. Not just recommended but mandatory.”—Lee Child xa0 “[Gerritsen] has an imagination that allows her to conjure up depths of human behavior so dark and frightening that she makes Edgar Allan Poe and H. P. Lovecraft seem like goody-two-shoes.”— Chicago Tribune “One of the most versatile voices in thriller fiction today.”— The Providence Journal The Silent Girl “Another great thrill ride . . . one of Gerritsen’s best.”—Associated Press xa0 “An exciting and suspense-filled adventure.”—Wichita Falls Times Record News Ice Cold “Gerritsen paces Ice Cold with surgical precision.”—Salon xa0 “The kind of book you’d read in one sitting.”— Chicago Sun-Times Tess Gerritsen is a physician and an internationally bestselling author. She gained nationwide acclaim for her first novel of suspense, the New York Times bestseller Harvest . She is also the author of the bestsellers The Silent Girl, Ice Cold , The Keepsake , The Bone Garden , The Mephisto Club , Vanish , Body Double , The Sinner , The Apprentice , The Surgeon , Life Support , Bloodstream , and Gravity . Tess Gerritsen lives in Maine. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 9780345515636|excerptGerritsen / THE LAST TO DIEWe called him Icarus.It was not his real name, of course. My childhood on the farm taught me that you must never give a name to an animal marked for slaughter. Instead you referred to it as Pig Number One or Pig Number Two, and you always avoided looking it in the eye, to shield yourself from any glimpse of self-xadawareness or personality or affection. When a beast trusts you, it takes far more resolve to slit its throat.We had no such issue with Icarus, who neither trusted us nor had any inkling of who we were. But we knew a great deal about him. We knew that he lived behind high walls in a hilltop villa on the outskirts of Rome. That he and his wife, Lucia, had two sons, ages eight and ten. That despite his immense wealth, he had simple tastes in food, and a favorite local restaurant, La Nonna, at which he dined almost every Thursday.And that he was a monster. Which was the reason we came to be in Italy that summer.The hunting of monsters is not for the faint of heart. Nor is it for those who feel bound by such trivial doctrines as law or national borders. Monsters, after all, do not play by the rules, so neither can we. Not if we hope to defeat them.But when you abandon civilized standards of conduct, you run the risk of becoming a monster yourself. And that is what happened that summer in Rome. I did not recognize it at the time; none of us did.Until it was too late.ONEOn the night that thirteen-xadyear-xadold Claire Ward should have died, she stood on the window ledge of her third-xadfloor Ithaca bedroom, trying to decide whether to jump. Twenty feet below were scraggly forsythia bushes, long past their spring bloom. They would cushion her fall, but most likely there’d be broken bones involved. She glanced across at the maple tree, eyeing the sturdy branch that arched only a few feet away. She’d never attempted this leap before, because she’d never been forced to. Until tonight she’d managed to sneak out the front door without being noticed. But those nights of easy escapes were over, because Boring Bob was on to her. From now on young lady, you are staying home! No more running around town after dark like a wildcat.If I break my neck on this jump, she thought, it’s all Bob’s fault.Yes, that maple branch was definitely within reach. She had places to go, people to see, and she couldn’t hang around here forever, weighing her chances.She crouched, tensing for the leap, but suddenly froze as an approaching car’s headlights angled around the corner. The SUV glided like a black shark beneath her window and continued slowly up the quiet street, as if searching for a particular house. Not ours, she thought; no one interesting ever turned up at the residence of her foster parents Boring Bob and Equally Boring Barbara Buckley. Even their names were boring, not to mention their dinner conversations. How was your day, dear? And yours? The weather’s turning nice, isn’t it? Can you pass me the potatoes?In their tweedy, bookish world, Claire was the alien, the wild child they’d never understand, although they tried. They really did. She should be living instead with artists or actors or musicians, people who stayed up all night and knew how to have fun. Her kind of people.The black SUV had vanished. It was now or never.She took a breath and sprang. Felt the night air whoosh in her long hair as she soared through the darkness. She landed, graceful as a cat, and the branch shuddered under her weight. Piece of cake. She scrambled down to a lower branch and was about to jump off when that black SUV returned. Again it glided past, engine purring. She watched it until it vanished around the corner; then she dropped down onto the wet grass.Glancing back at the house, she expected Bob to come storming out the front door, yelling at her: Get back inside now, young lady! But the porch remained dark.Now the night could begin.She zipped up her hoodie and headed toward the town common, where the action was—xadif you could call it that. At this late hour, the street was quiet, most of the windows dark. It was a neighborhood of picture-xadperfect houses with gingerbread trim, a street populated by college professors and gluten-xadfree vegan moms who all belonged to book groups. Ten square miles surrounded by reality was how Bob affectionately described the town, but he and Barbara belonged here.Claire did not know where she belonged.She strode across the street, scattering dead leaves with her scuffed boots. A block ahead, a trio of teens, two boys and a girl, stood smoking cigarettes beneath the pool of light cast by a streetlamp.“Hey,” she called out to them.The taller boy waved. “Hey, Claire Bear. I heard you were grounded again.”“For about thirty seconds.” She took the lit cigarette he offered her, drew in a lungful of smoke, and exhaled with a happy sigh. “So what’s our plan tonight? What’re we doing?”“I hear there’s a party over at the falls. But we need to find a ride.”“What about your sister? She could take us.”“Naw, Dad took her car keys. Let’s just hang around here and see who else shows up.” The boy paused, frowning past Claire’s shoulder. “Uh-xadoh. Look who just did.”She turned and groaned as a dark blue Saab pulled up at the curb beside her. The passenger window rolled down and Barbara Buckley said, “Claire, get in the car.”“I’m just hanging out with my friends.”“It’s nearly midnight and tomorrow’s a school day.”“It’s not like I’m doing anything illegal.”From the driver’s seat, Bob Buckley ordered, “Get in the car now, young lady!”“You’re not my parents!”“But we are responsible for you. It’s our job to raise you right, and that’s what we’re trying to do. If you don’t come home with us now, there’ll be—xadthere’ll be, well, consequences!”Yeah, I’m so scared I’m shaking in my boots. She started to laugh, but suddenly noticed that Barbara was wearing a bathrobe and Bob’s hair was standing up on one side of his head. They’d been in such a hurry to chase after her that they hadn’t even gotten dressed. They both looked older and wearier, a rumpled, middle-xadaged couple who’d been roused from bed and, because of her, would wake up exhausted tomorrow.Barbara gave a tired sigh. “I know we’re not your parents, Claire. I know you hate living with us, but we’re trying to do our best. So please, get in the car. It’s not safe for you out here.”Claire shot an exasperated glance at her friends, then climbed into the Saab’s backseat and swung the door shut. “Okay?” she said. “Satisfied?”Bob turned to look at her. “This isn’t about us. It’s about you. We swore to your parents that you’d always be looked after. If Isabel were alive, it would break her heart to see you now. Out of control, angry all the time. Claire, you were given a second chance, and that’s a gift. Please, don’t throw it away. Now buckle up, okay?”If he’d been angry, if he’d yelled at her, she could have dealt with it. But the look he gave her was so mournful that she felt guilty. Guilty for being a jerk, for repaying their kindness with rebellion. It was not the Buckleys’ fault that her parents were dead. That her life was screwed up.As they drove away, she sat hugging herself in the backseat, remorseful but too proud to apologize. Tomorrow, I’ll be nicer to them, she thought. I’ll help Barbara set the table, maybe even wash Bob’s car. Because damn, this car sure does need it.“Bob,” said Barbara. “What’s that car doing over there?”An engine roared. Headlights hurtled toward them.Barbara screamed: “Bob!”The impact threw Claire against her seat belt as the night exploded with terrible sounds. Shattering glass. Crumpling steel.And someone crying, whimpering. Opening her eyes, she saw that the world had turned upside down, and she realized that the whimpers were her own. “Barbara?” she whispered.She heard a muted pop, then another. Smelled gasoline. She was suspended by the seat belt, and the strap cut so deeply into her ribs that she could scarcely breathe. She fumbled for the release. It clicked open and her head thumped down, sending pain shooting up her neck. Somehow she managed to twist around so she was lying flat, the shattered window in view. The smell of gasoline was stronger. She squirmed toward the window, thinking about flames, about searing heat and flesh cooking on her bones. Get out, get out. While there’s still time to save Bob and Barbara! She punched through the last pebbly fragments of glass, sent them clattering onto the pavement.Two feet moved into view and halted in front of her. She stared up at the man who blocked her escape. She could not see a face, only his silhouette. And his gun.Tires shrieked as another car roared toward them.Claire jerked back into the Saab like a tortoise withdrawing into the safety of her shell. Shrinking from the window, she covered her head with her arms and wondered if this time the bullet would hurt. If she would feel it explode in her skull. She was curled so tightly into a ball that all she heard was the sound of her own breathing, the whoosh of her own pulse.She almost missed the voice calling her name.“Claire Ward?” It was a woman.I must be dead. And that’s an angel, speaking to me.“He’s gone. It’s safe to come out now,” the angel said. “But you must hurry.”Claire opened her eyes and peered through her fingers at the face staring sideways through the broken window. A slender arm reached toward her, and Claire cowered from it.“He’ll be back,” the woman said. “So hurry.”Claire grasped the offered hand, and the woman hauled her out. Broken glass tinkled like hard rain as Claire rolled onto the pavement. Too quickly she sat up, and the night wobbled around her. She caught one dizzying glimpse of the overturned Saab and had to drop her head again.“Can you stand?”Slowly, Claire looked up. The woman was dressed all in black. Her hair was tied back in a ponytail, the blond strands bright enough to reflect a faint glimmer from the streetlamp. “Who are you?” Claire whispered.“My name doesn’t matter.”“Bob—xadBarbara—xad” Claire looked at the overturned Saab. “We have to get them out of the car! Help me.” Claire crawled to the driver’s side and yanked open the door.Bob Buckley tumbled out onto the pavement, his eyes open and sightless. Claire stared at the bullet hole punched into his temple. “Bob,” she moaned. “Bob!”“You can’t help him now.”“Barbara—xadwhat about Barbara?”“It’s too late.” The woman grabbed her by the shoulders and gave her a hard shake. “They’re dead, do you understand? They’re both dead.”Claire shook her head, her gaze still on Bob. On the pool of blood now spreading like a dark halo around his head. “This can’t be happening,” she whispered. “Not again.”“Come, Claire.” The woman grabbed her hand and pulled her to her feet. “Come with me. If you want to live.” Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Rizzoli & Isles •
  • Hit series on TNT
  • “Suspense doesn’t get smarter than this. Not just recommended but mandatory.”—Lee Child
  • For the second time in his short life, Teddy Clock has survived a massacre. Two years ago, he barely escaped when his entire family was slaughtered. Now, at fourteen, in a hideous echo of the past, Teddy is the lone survivor of his foster family’s mass murder. Orphaned once more, the traumatized teenager has nowhere to turn—until the Boston PD puts detective Jane Rizzoli on the case. Determined to protect this young man, Jane discovers that what seemed like a coincidence is instead just one horrifying part of a relentless killer’s merciless mission.   Jane spirits Teddy to the exclusive Evensong boarding school, a sanctuary where young victims of violent crime learn the secrets and skills of survival in a dangerous world. But even behind locked gates, and surrounded by acres of sheltering Maine wilderness, Jane fears that Evensong’s mysterious benefactors aren’t the only ones watching. When strange blood-splattered dolls are found dangling from a tree, Jane knows that her instincts are dead on. And when she meets Will Yablonski and Claire Ward, students whose tragic pasts bear a shocking resemblance to Teddy’s, it becomes chillingly clear that a circling predator has more than one victim in mind.   Joining forces with her trusted partner, medical examiner Maura Isles, Jane is determined to keep these orphans safe from harm. But an unspeakable secret dooms the children’s fate—unless Jane and Maura can finally put an end to an obsessed killer’s twisted quest.
  • PRAISE FOR TESS GERRITSEN
  • “[Gerritsen] has an imagination that allows her to conjure up depths of human behavior so dark and frightening that she makes Edgar Allan Poe and H. P. Lovecraft seem like goody-two-shoes.”—
  • Chicago Tribune
  • “One of the most versatile voices in thriller fiction today.”—
  • The Providence Journal
  • The Silent Girl
  • “Another great thrill ride . . . one of Gerritsen’s best.”—Associated Press   “An exciting and suspense-filled adventure.”—Wichita Falls
  • Times Record News
  • Ice Cold
  • “Gerritsen paces
  • Ice Cold
  • with surgical precision.”—Salon   “The kind of book you’d read in one sitting.”—
  • Chicago Sun-Times

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Taut, suspenseful story with twists and turns - A fun read!

Tess Gerritsen's tenth Rizzoli and Isles book, Last To Die, is a taut, highly enjoyable thriller. In this book, we follow homicide detective Rizzoli and medical examiner Isles as they team up to save three orphans. These orphans have one major thing in common: they are each survivors of not one, but two family massacres that killed both their birth families and their foster families. The three orphans are placed in Evensong Boarding School in Maine, which is run by the mysterious Mephisto Society. Evensong is a place where young people who are victims of violent crime are taught survival skills. I'll hold off on any spoilers here, but suffice it to say that the tragedies in these three orphans' lives appear to be interconnected, as the story twists and turns towards a violent and tense conclusion. The secret behind the three orphans' stories goes way back in time and space, even into a different country.

Gerritsen mixes personal details of her main characters (Rizzoli and Isles) into the story, allowing us to learn more about them, even ten books in. Overall, this one is a solid, fun read. Fans of the TNT television show will really enjoy it.
There are two things I like about Gerritsen and this series. First, I enjoy being able to just jump into a book, already knowing and liking the main characters. Now, with the television series, there are even real faces attached to the names, albeit actors. Second, as a physician, I enjoy reading books by other doctors. Gerritsen is perhaps the most successful physician fiction writer since the late Michael Crichton.

If you enjoy Gerritsen's books and books with a medical bent, then I highly recommend the following: Dr. Samuel Shem's [[ASIN:0425238091 The House of God]] is a `must read' for anyone interested in reading a novel about the crazy things that happen inside a big city hospital. Although it was written in the 70's, it's still the most widely read book about doctors today.
65 people found this helpful
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"Last to Die"

I have read all of Tess Gerritsen's books and looked forward to her latest novel, "Last to Die." Having read 2/3rds of the book, I had to stop, it is such a ridiculous story, totally not plausible. During the story, Gerritsen goes on a tangent about Rizzoli's mother that has absolutely nothing to do with the story.

Tess Gerritsen has the ability to write great stories, such as, "The Mephisto Club" which was an outstanding read. This book I am sure, was just to fill a contract commitment to publish with her publisher. Lastly, there are so many blank pages and short sentences to fill book pages. Perhaps Tess Gerritsen needs a new editor! This is why some Kindle e-readers have commented that the e format seemed much shorter. Compare Stephen King pages to Tess Gerritsen, they are filled completely with great writing. This book is a horrible disappointment, don't waste your time reading it.
13 people found this helpful
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Disappointed

Hmm. The new Tess Gerritson. I was disappointed. Normally I give her an A, but in reality this book is a B/B minus.

Continuity issues, unresolved plot issues...frankly, it's as if she was bored with all her characters and just used her past novels do all the work.. Plot was...unbelievable. No, I should say it was unbelievably stupid.

I am very sad. I am afraid she has run out of steam, at least for this series.

Same thing happened to me with Patricia Cornwell.

I wonder if she is ill or had a life crisis and just had to make a publishing deadline?

OTOH, I read the Kindle edition. No way it was 358 pages that it says in the hard cover edition. Is Kindle abridging books?
11 people found this helpful
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Characters from earlier books re-appear in somewhat lackluster tenth entry in set...

No doubt Gerritsen's Rizzoli & Isles novels are enjoying increased attention given the popularity of the TV series of the same name. Unlike the show, wherein the two leading ladies are gal pals almost joined at the hip, they are mostly just professional colleagues in the books. Moreover, Jane is married and has a fairly new baby; and Maura seems to be over an illicit affair with a Catholic priest that lasted for several stories (we definitely won't see that on TV!!)...

This tenth entry in the set is not exactly a sequel, but it does indeed reprise characters from both #6, "The Mephisto Club", and #8, "Ice Cold". The troubled teenager Julian from that latter story is now living at "Evensong", a specialized live-in academy in remote Maine, run by the Mephisto Club, for (as it turns out) children who have been victims of murdered families. A new murder in Boston of foster parents to 14-year-old Teddy Clock, horrifying in that his natural family had been murdered years earlier, has led to his temporary housing at the Evensong. It soon develops that he and two other of the residents share such a double-murder history, which leads Jane to suspect the cases are inter-related. A number of bizarre events at the school, where Maura has been visiting to "oversee" Julian's well-being, eventually lead the team to discovering a long drawn out series of revenge killings, which are by no means over. A satisfying ending concludes a rather suspenseful tale.

The story is fairly typical of these novels, although we felt the plot seemed too centered on the kids and not enough on the mystery per se and the solving thereof. Toward the end, there were some obvious omissions about how our leading lady shows up at the most propitious moment, almost in the spirit of "we need to get this over with"! All in all, a decent but not necessarily spectacular addition to the set.
8 people found this helpful
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What a dud

This is not a good book. It seemed to be a bad hybrid of "Hardy Boys" and 'CSI". I quit at about page 150 because I got tired of reading about children. I prefer to read books about adult detectives-not Hardy Boys or Nancy Drew-and psychologically damaged ones at that. I also like a discernable plot. I did not find one.

There are an awful lot of good books being published. I value my spare time too highly to squander it on a book that does not hold my interest.
5 people found this helpful
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Good plot, dissapointing ending

Because a new Rizzoli / Isles book is only an annual occurance, I greatly anticipated Last to Die.

The novel started good, kept it's trilling pace right through to the end. With so many twists and turns it kept the plot alive.

When the kids do get involved in the case I did get that Harry Potter-ish feel which I liked. It's totally different from previous books in this series that only involves adults.

We see the return of Anthony Sansone, Evensong, Julian and Bear. Like in Stephen King novels, I like to meet old characters in new books.

All in all this was a rather good book, but I found the ending a bit dissapointing. The villian and the motive turned out to be a bit mundane. Without giving too much away, I think I would have been more satisfied if the killer turned out to be an international criminal mind or a mafia boss, rather than someone who abuses power. It was unexpected though, which is why I love reading Gerritsen - her books are never predictable.

What also bothered me is that so many pieces of the puzzle are left unsolved, just hanging in the air. Who killed the man in the woods? What was the significance of finding the hand, was it deliberately severed and left to be found? Who planted the dolls and killed Herman the rooster? What happened to Roman? Just a few questions that remained unanswered that I found a bit tedious. Was it the killer or someone working for the killer?

I also hoped to see more of the new detective the author created in The Silent Girl, Johnny Tam. No such luck though. And the issue with Jane's mom and dad needs to resolved. It's been dragging on over quite a few of the books in the series and is a minor distraction, if somewhat of an irritaion to me personally.

Apart from that, if you are a real fan of the series then you will enjoy this book. It's not a fundemental piece in the series (as say the Surgeon or Body Double), but it's worth reading.
5 people found this helpful
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Read the books, skip the television show!

LAST TO DIE by Tess Gerritsen

My addiction for the Jane Rizzoli/Maura Isles novels has been in full bloom for many years now. When I read that a television show based on Tess Gerritsen's books was in the works, I was extremely eager to see how well they translated to the small screen.
After watching a few episodes I was a bit confused. I heard that television takes many liberties and molds characters and events crucial to `the' original fictional personas and adds and subtracts to create an audience.
The main characters of Rizzoli and Isles in Ms. Gerristsen's thrillers are so much better than their television counterparts. The characterizations of Jane and Maura are merely constant one liners always tossing out sexual innuendos and in my opinion dry humping their way through one murder investigation after another.
. The inner workings of a deep and caring relationship for each other and the professions that encompass their lives is what makes Ms. Gerritsen's detective novels so enjoyable.

Three teenagers have been orphaned `twice' by unknown forces and come together at a school for `damaged' children run by the always mysterious and extremely rich Anthony Sansome. He is the head of the Mephisto Club. An organization created to seek out and destroy evil at any cost and rumored to have members scattered all over the globe.
Toss in a scary, old castle, now the Evensong School and a creepy cast of teachers/professors and the insight of two of the finest written crime solvers in fiction today and you have a few sleepless nights. Resulting in jumping at every unknown noise heard throughout the house. What was that????????

Jim Munchel
Co-Manager Books
Books A Million
Harrisburg, Pa.
5 people found this helpful
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The Grim Reaper won't give up, and returns to finish his job ..

This tenth book in the series about the ' Queen of the Dead' Pathologist Maura Isles, and the 'bit*chy' Detective Jane Rizzoli isn't per se a sequel, but it does indeed reprise characters from both the 6th [[ASIN:0345477006 The Mephisto Club ( Rizzoli & Isles, Book 6)]], and the 8th [[ASIN:B007K4OICU Ice Cold: A Rizzoli & Isles Novel (Rizzoli & Isles Novels)]].
The troubled 16-year-old Julian from that story is now living at "Evensong", a specialized boarding school in remotest Maine, run by the Mephisto Club, for children who had experienced the assassination of their nearest and dearest.

And now we encounter 13-year-old Claire, a notorious 'night crawler' because of a brain wound that has irreparable damaged her sleep centre. Out in the dark again she is picked up by her foster parents only to be shot at again. Miraculously saved by a blonde woman, she is admitted to Evensong.
Then we will come to know 14-year-old Will, the Fat Boy, Puft Marshmallow - some kind of freak, too. Searching for a comet to name after his late father, he casually survives a murder attempt that cost the lives of his aunt and uncle. His place to recover will be Evensong, too.
And then the murder of a Boston family - parents and three little girls - an heartbreaking scene of crime... And only 14-year-old Teddy is the survivor. And is sent to Evensong, only place to get him into safety. More horrifying in the story of Teddy is that his natural family had been murdered 2 years earlier.
It soon will emerge that two other of the residents share such a double-murder history which leads Jane and Maura to suspect the cases are connected.
But Boston PD, especially Jane's favourite officer Darren Crown, the Hollywood Cop Nr. One pins it all to an illegal alien, the 'evil genius' Zapata, friend of the poor Columbian householder.

Then bizarre events at Evensong, where Maura is visiting Julian and his dog Bear to see if he feels himself at home there, will lead bothour heroines to connect the dots and find a long series of revenge killings, which are yet in full evolution.
And - who could it be otherwise - there are connentions to international terrorism and three-letter state agencies, too.
Tricks and tracks, both right and false, will lead us to the end, full of action, with casualities on both sides - the good as well as the bad.

In this story we can find family trouble for Jane because of the bizarre situation of her parents. We can observe Maura and Jane in private and intimately discussing Maura's diverse difficulties to bond in and with Boston.
And something rather strange happens - the 'Queen of the Dead' finally wants to have a living!

For my little self this is one of the best thrillers written by Tess Gerritsen in the last years. It is personal, interesting, the children's feelings are gripping, and - finally , perhaps, is there LOVE in the air???
I will read it for sure in the next Maura Isles/Jane Rizzoli novel.
See You soon, Gals!
4 people found this helpful
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The "just mail it in" school of literature

Maybe I should have read others in this series earlier, to understand the context. If earlier volumes in the series were better, then this one represents the literary school of "Now I can just mail in the next book on my contract." On the other hand, I'm glad I didn't read the others, because they might have also been a waste of time.
2 people found this helpful
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Poor writing

This author depends on Rizzoli and Isles fans to buy this book. The story is good but the writing is terrible. Wish I could get a refund. If you're a fan of the show, skip this book.
2 people found this helpful