Wednesday, March 30, 2022

Book Reviews - The Book of Cold Cases; Simone St. James - Nine Lives; Peter Swanson

The Book of Cold Cases; Simone St. James
Penguin Audio - 10 hours 44 min.
(Narrators: Brittney Pressley, Kirsten Potter and Robert Petkoff - very good)

Shea Collins is a young woman who works in medical office by day and maintains a true crime blog, The Book of Cold Cases, in her free time.  She tries to get tips on unsolved cases the authorities are no longer actively pursuing.  One day at her office job she recognizes Beth Greer, a woman linked to, but acquitted of, (2) separate 1977 unsolved murders. Both victims were men and were shot by a woman who left a note. The gun used, coincidentally, was the same type of gun that killed Beth's father years earlier. Beth has kept a low profile at the family Oregon mansion ever since she was acquitted of what has been called the Lady Killer Murders.

Shea pursues Beth in the hopes of getting a brief interview and surprisingly, Beth eventually agrees to meet with her at the Greer mansion. The meetings are uncomfortable to say the least and it seems clear that there is at least 1-2 ghostly beings that are not happy about what is going on.  

The characters were interesting enough as both Shea and Beth have a good deal of baggage which gets uncovered.  Shea has been dealing with trauma from her past and we learn of Beth's troubled childhood as well. The story has a slow build and was satisfying over all. I thought the author did a decent job balancing the serial killer story line while adding a bit of the paranormal as well. Of course my favorite minor character was a cat by the name of Winston Purrchill.  I loved the authors previous book: The Sundown Motel which also had a bit of a paranormal element to it. This offering was slightly less thrilling for me but, yet it held my interest and I enjoyed the way the story played out.

Rating - 4/5 stars

Nine Lives; Peter Swanson
William Morrow and Harper Audio - 2022
(combo read/listen)
(Narrators - Jacques Roy and Mark Bramhall - very good - 7 hours 11 min)

Nine Lives was an interesting mystery that involved a rather cryptic list of names. Nine individuals in different parts of the country receive a list of nine names, their name being one of them.  At a quick glance none of the individuals seem to know the other people on the list but, it soon becomes clear that someone wants them these people dead.  The people on the list are different ages, occupations, sexual orientations and live in different areas of the country.  What's the connection or motive? One of the individuals on the list is Jessica Winslow, an FBI Agent from Albany, NY and, she hopes to see this case solved before she ends up as one of the victims.

This isn't a really long book and the story is told from multiple POVs which worked out well; I never found it difficult to follow even when listening on audio after I switched off from the eBook.  I felt like the reader is given just enough back story on each of the individuals on the list to keep things interesting before the story moves on to another potential victim. The manner of death varied which kept it interesting as well.  Some of the characters were likable while others not so much.  In many ways this book reminded me of Agatha Christie's,  And Then There Were None except that all of these victims died in very different locales.

Rating - 4/5 stars

23 comments:

  1. Diane, you and I have been reading the same two books. Ha! I haven't written about them yet, but maybe I'll just direct people to your post here. Your thoughts are very similar to mine about both books. I've read several books by both Simone St. James and Peter Swanson. I liked these new offerings, but will say that neither is my favorite of their books. Good enough, certainly.

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    1. I agree that neither book is a favorite of mine for these authors but, still good entertainment factor.

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  2. I have copies of both of these. I need someone to light a fire under my tush. My reading is better but I am reading like a normal person would, not like a book blogger. LOL.

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    1. You've had a lot on your plate these last few months. I'm sure your reading will pick up.

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  3. I haven't read either of these authors. I may read them later, right now my tbr list is very long! I'm semi out of my slump but still not reading as much as I'd like.

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    1. Those slumps happen to all of us. I do recommend both authors even though these 2 particular books weren't favorites, they were still good.

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  4. Wish I had more time to listen to audio books! These look great!

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  5. Lately my eyes seem tired in the evening so I enjoy listening before bed. Haven't been on any long drives in a while but I also listen when walking.

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  6. I want to read both of these books! Glad to hear you liked both of them. :)

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    1. Both would be worth reading if I had to pick one I liked a tad better iy would be The Book of Cold Cases.

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  7. The Book of Cold Cases is definitely on my radar, I keep hearing about it all over the place.

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    1. Yes, it does seem like it's a hot book right now. It's really only about one "cold case" but, it was quite atmospheric.

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  8. I have 9 Lives on my list to read in April and am looking forward to it.

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    1. I hope you enjoy it. I've read most every book Swanson has written and Eight Perfect Murders was a favorite, this was very good though.

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  9. The Book of cold cases is very popular at the moment. I am going to try to get my hands on it for sure. I love Peter Swanson 9 lives sure sounds intriguing!

    Elza Reads

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    1. Not sure whether you've read The Sundown Motel by Simone St. James but, I liked that even more than The Book of Cold Cases.

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  10. These both sound like worthwhile reads. I'm especially interested in The Book of Cold Cases.

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    1. Yes, I enjoyed that one a bit more over Nine Lives. Have you ever read The Sun Down Motel by St. James? I really liked that even more.

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  11. The Book of Cold Cases was quite good but, I liked her previous book The Sundown Motel even more.

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  12. Both of these are on my TBR but The Book of Cold Cases is really calling me. It looks really good.

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  13. I think I mentioned that I have both of these but your post reminded me that I have not gotten to them yet. I am making a dent though, finally, in my review stack.

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    1. I liked The Book of Cold Cases a tad more than Nine Lives - both decent though. St. James book, for me, wasn't as good as The Sun Down Motel though.

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