Ratings7
Average rating4.3
When a woman s body is discovered submerged in a crab pot in the chilly waters of Puget Sound, Detective Tracy Crosswhite finds herself with a tough case to untangle. Before they can identify the killer, Tracy and her colleagues on the Seattle PD s Violent Crimes Section must figure out who the victim is. Her autopsy, however, reveals she may have gone to great lengths to conceal her identity. So who was she running from? After evidence surfaces that their Jane Doe may be a woman who suspiciously disappeared months earlier, Tracy is once again haunted by the memory of her sister s unsolved murder. Dredging up details from the woman s past leads to conflicting clues that only seem to muddy the investigation. As Tracy begins to uncover a twisted tale of brutal betrayal and desperate greed, she ll find herself risking everything to confront a killer who won t go down without a deadly fight. Once again, "New York Times" bestselling author Robert Dugoni delivers a taut, riveting thriller in the fourth installment of his acclaimed Tracy Crosswhite series."
Reviews with the most likes.
Tracy Crosswhite and The A team are at it again in this lastest mystery from Robert Dugoni. It's the story of Andrea Strickland and her husband. I really enjoyed this book it kept my attention with all the twists and turns.
Now I'm hooked. Even though Dugoni wrote Book #4 in his Tracy Crosswhite Series with the usual twists and turns of a murder mystery, there are enough surprises and more than once, not what I thought was going to happen did happen. Some romance but not too much; some journeys around Washington state; many of the same characters from the previous three books further developed; still some whining by the main character; and so after four books the characters almost feel like family and Washington feels, once again, like home. It has a dark, disgusting start, which has been revealed by numerous reviews, but that should not stop you from reading this interesting and well-crafted mystery. And, hey, it's woman-centered too.