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611 pages, Mass Market Paperback
First published October 1, 2004
When the small town of Wrightsburg is rocked by gruesome murders, both ex-secret service agents, Michelle Maxwell and Sean King, now private investigators (partners) are hot on the murderers tail. What sets the murderer apart is how he copies famous serial killers when he commits a crime.
The light banter between Michelle and Sean are the highlight of the book. Their bickering does bring comic relief to an otherwise intense thriller. However the drawback of the book is the introduction of too many characters. From the very beginning, when Michelle and Sean take up the case, Baldacci swamps the reader with a lot of characters; there are so many people, and all under suspicion and so little information. Also it took me a bit of time to actually get into the book. I actually left it many times in the beginning.
Another thing that works against the book is how the characters of Michelle and Sean are presented. Michelle just seems so fake. She is more brawn than brains. Sean is the analytical one who dissects the case with painstaking detail while Michelle just flails around in the background shooting guns. For someone who had spent "nine intense years in the Secret Service", she doesn't do much except shooting her mouth off, firing guns and being impulsive while Sean does all the work. Whatever she does stumble upon, it's a mere stroke of good luck.
Michelle kind off disappoints and her character is not believable. Sean does most of the solving and he can ALSO do what Michelle can ONLY do so one wonders why was there a need of Michelle's character?
As the book proceeds, things get more confusing as the number of murders increase, which in turn increases the number of characters and information. I was trying really hard to solve the case myself and actually had an urge to draw a Character Chart like Kate Beckett does in "Castle".
This said, I did enjoy the book but I finished it in instalments.
Would recommend to� nobody. It was dreadful. It made the boring stuff I had to do even more boring.