Review by Booklist Review
Woods' popular heroine, police chief Holly Barker, returns for her third adventure. When two real estate developers are murdered by sniper fire and a third barely escapes a bullet while in Holly's company, Holly immediately becomes curious about the motivation behind the crimes. Developer Ed Shine bid on a property that was confiscated from drug dealers, and it turns out the two murdered developers had placed bids as well. When Harry Crisp and the FBI step in, Holly fears that the case will be taken out of her hands. She finally uncovers the killer, but by the time she gets to him, he's floating in a river with a bullet in his skull. The man's cousin is unwilling to help, and the man's fiancee, Marina, doesn't seem to know anything, though she is in possession of a notebook that might contain crucial information. In addition, Holly is pleasantly distracted by Grant Early, a handsome undercover FBI agent who won't tell Holly anything about what he's working on, even though it might be related to her case. The third entry in the Holly Barker series is a suspenseful, exciting mystery that is sure to please Woods' many fans. --Kristine HuntleyAdult Books Young adult recommendations in this issue have been contributed by the Booklist staff and by reviewers Nancy Bent, Carrie Bissey, John Charles, Tina Coleman, Patty Engelmann, Sally Estes, Gordon Flagg, Connie Fletcher, Roberta Johnson, Judy King, Beth Leistensnider, Regina Schroeder, Candace Smith, and Linda Waddle. Titles recommended for teens are marked with the following symbols: YA, for books of general YA interest; YA/C, for books with particular curriculum value; YA/L, for books with a limited teenage audience; YA/M, for books best suited to mature teens.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
In Woods's 24th novel-his third in the Holly Barker series (after Orchid Blues)-the prolific bestselling novelist revisits savvy, sexy ex-MP officer (and her dog, Daisy), now police chief of the small Florida east coast town of Orchid Beach. As the fast-paced but fluffy and rather predictable thriller begins, two out of three Miami bidders for a glitzy, gated residential complex with golf course are shot and killed. The third bidder, orchid fancier Ed Shine, a former New York real estate mogul and new resident of Orchid Beach, narrowly escapes the same fate. Shine renames his newly acquired property Blood Orchid, after an exotic hybrid blossom he has developed-a name that seems gruesomely prophetic when it turns out that the Miami mob may be involved with the property. Meanwhile, Barker, investigating the case and trying to discover who is bugging her beach house, spots the intruder's van from the plane of her flying instructor, Ginny (who is also her dad Ham's new bedmate). The two women make an emergency landing on the beach and scare the perp away, but his body is soon found floating in the Indian River. The trail leads to a shifty Cuban locksmith in Fort Lauderdale and the late intruder's fiance. Enter a Miami restaurateur with mob ties, and corpses pile up as the plot thickens. Woods writes strong action scenes, but his usual flair for tight, creative plotting is sadly missed here. Author tour. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
Forget Sneaky Pie and Koko here's a detective who gets help from her Doberman, Daisy. In her third outing, Chief of Police Holly Barker battles a nasty real estate scam even as she recovers from the loss of her fianc. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Hit-or-miss thrillermeister Woods (The Short Forever, p. 140, etc.) misses big-time with this tale of a real-estate developer who's executing the competition, and everybody else in sight, in Police Chief Holly Barker's beloved Orchid Beach. Expecting lively interest in the Palmetto Gardens property the feds had seized from a drug-laundering operation, the General Services Administration gets deadly interest instead: Two likely bidders drop out of the action when they're shot dead, and the shooter just misses the only surviving bidder whose offer is acceptable, orchid-growing retiree Ed Shine, as he's enjoying a get-acquainted nightcap with Holly and her father Ham (Orchid Blues, 2001, etc.). Exequies for the departed are cut short by Holly's discovery of a clandestine listening device in her place. Though it's never clear what the bugger hoped to learn, his identity as Fort Lauderdale locksmith Carlos Alvarez is revealed when his corpse is dumped in the Indian River, conveniently in Holly's jurisdiction. Since the identity of the trigger man is obvious and that of his paymaster scarcely less so, there's nothing to do but watch (1) Holly's turf battles with her old FBI friend Harry Crisp, (2) Holly's between-the-sheets wrestling with her new FBI friend Grant Early, and (3) Holly's participation in a slaughter that soon rises like a Saturn rocket as the conspirators try to cover up for their lack of secrecy and finesse by killing everybody they've ever met. (Orchid Beach's Chief of Police is responsible for two of the ten casualties before a bomb sends the body count spiraling out of sight.) Even if edenic Orchid Beach is "the way Florida should have turned out, but didn't," it's hard to break a sweat worrying about the deaths of so many faceless felons and their associates in the absence of mystery, suspense, or any complications other than where to put the body bags. Juiceless, uninspired, routine: Woods's worst yet. Author tour
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