Tattooed to Death
-
- $9.99
-
- $9.99
Publisher Description
Perfect for fans of Ellery Adams and Eva Gates, this action-filled, entertaining cozy featuring dark family secrets, revenge and friendship goals will have you gripped from the start to its shocking conclusion.
How well do you really know your friends?
Journaling blogger Mandy Meadows is determined to clear her friend’s name when she discovers a body by a dumpster.
Single mom, barista and journaling video blogger extraordinaire Mandy Meadows is distracted from her shift in the University of Seattle Hospital coffee bar when her friend – nurse and fellow journaling video blogger Reese O’Leary-Sett – receives a massage from hell at the hands of Coral Le Charme, the hospital’s new massage therapist. But concern over Coral’s dubious skills is the least of Mandy's worries when she discovers Coral’s lifeless body by a dumpster later that evening.
What dark secrets was Coral hiding? Mandy’s tenant, homicide detective Justin Ahola, is on the case – and he has Reese firmly in his sights. Determined to help her friend, Mandy digs deeper into Coral’s life and makes some alarming discoveries. Can she clear Reese’s name and bring a killer to justice?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
At the outset of Redmond's fast, fun sequel to 2020's Journaled to Death featuring vlogger Mandy Meadows, a barista at the University of Seattle Hospital coffee bar, nurse Reese O'Leary-Sett, Mandy's friend and fellow vlogger, huffs into the bar proclaiming that she could kill the hospital's new massage therapist, Coral Le Charme ("Worst massage ever," she says). A few hours later, Mandy finds Coral's body in the hospital parking lot on her stomach is a series of black bullseye tattoos. Reese soon lands in jail, and Mandy resolves to find the true culprit. Dysfunctional families, dodgy meditation gurus, and a potential stalker stud the plot with potential motives and suspects. Meanwhile, Mandy deals with her child support-dodging ex-husband, her blossoming attraction to the handsome homicide cop who rents her basement apartment, and the fact that her 15-year-old daughter is growing up. Redmond strikes a good balance between Mandy's crime solving and personal life. Readers will look forward to spending more time with this resourceful heroine.