



Cold Case
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3.6 • 23 Ratings
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
LA detective Peter Decker and Rina Lazarus are back for another riveting thriller follow-up to 2007’s ‘The Burnt House’, from the bestselling Faye Kellerman
The savage murder of beloved teacher Bennett Little shocked a community and baffled police. That his killer was never caught has haunted one of his pupils in particular, the gifted but shy Genoa Greeves.
Eighteen years later, software billionaire Genoa reads of a similar carjacking and murder in Hollywood. Now able to wield enormous influence, she pressures the LAPD to direct Lieutenant Peter Decker to re-open the case and solve the homicides.
With Decker facing nothing but cold trails and dead leads, he enlists the help of his daughter, Hollywood detective Cindy, as well as Rina, his wife. It’s a decision he may come to regret as the line between cops and robbers gets dangerously blurred. Now Decker’s cold case is re-awakening treacherous secrets in a city where the price of fame has no limits…
Reviews
Praise for Faye Kellerman:
'Very exciting' Daily Mail
'Brutal but thoughtful and well-plotted, fast-moving and well told' Observer
'Sensational' Mirror
'Kellerman creates a claustophobic atmosphere, against a background of seediness, violence and distrust' Sunday Telegraph
'Kellerman moves her gritty mean streets LA plot along with breakneck pace' Irish Independent
'Hands down, the most refreshing mystery couple around' People
About the author
Born in St. Louis, Faye Kellerman is one of the most highly considered US crime authors. Her first novel, 'The Ritual Bath' (1986) introduced Sergeant Peter Decker and Rina Lazarus. It also won the 1987 Macavity Award for Best First Mystery. Kellerman currently lives in Beverly Hills with her husband and four children.
Customer Reviews
Good story, shame about the e-book
Faye Kellerman delivers another competent Pete and Rina story, but it was hard to enjoy because the typesetting is dreadful. Spelling errors, weird gaps in words, apostrophes are incorrect. Looks like the printed book was scanned in and nobody bothered to check it. Harper Collins wouldn’t release a printed book with this many errors, why is it acceptable to sell an e-book this poorly done?