Murder on the Isle of Capri
-
- $6.99
-
- $6.99
Publisher Description
Criminology Professor Marin Ryan and billionaire computer genius John Hunter are drawn into a homicide investigation when one of Marin's colleagues is murdered in Italy. Her friend's historical research uncovered a connection between sixteenth century pirates and three present-day wealthy families.
In this world of private jets, luxury yachts, and Italian villas, the chase leads Marin and John from Capri to New York to Hawaii and back, putting their lives in constant danger.
A reader of the Ryan-Hunter series wrote, Kept me up all night. Intrigue at its best. Another reader wrote, Nonstop adventure and excitement. Extremely well written. No dull moments EVER. Loved it, and another reader added, Every line held my attention, with such an interesting plot, and totally unexpected surprises appearing often. Suspense, intrigue, and "glitter" all in one package.
Customer Reviews
Excellent read
This book had me captivated from the start. Who doesn't want to lose themselves in a murder mystery 300 years in the making.
Murder on the island of Capri
This is a terribly written crime book! So much is totally unrealistic. So much time is used on things unrelated at all to the plot or character development. E.g. The surfing day in Hawaii- that added nothing! There were a few good descriptive paragraphs, but still not usually related to anything.
I got 1/2 way through the book and had to quit! A waste of time!
Murder on the Isle of Capri, Italy
One star because it isn't possible to give negative stars...save your brain cells and don't even start reading. Sometimes the free books are undiscovered gems but sometimes they're worth exactly what you pay...atrocious writing, unskilled authors, poor plot, just an all around bad writer. Actually lost brain cells trying to read this book. I'd say it reads like an eighth grader wrote it, but that probably insults a lot of eighth graders' writing skills. I can't believe that there's more than one in this series, I beg the authors to at least please take writing classes and basic English courses before inflicting any more on he unsuspecting reader