Black coral A thriller

Andrew Mayne, 1973-

Book - 2021

"Sloan McPherson and the Underwater Investigation Unit have discovered a van at the bottom of a murky Florida pond. Sealed inside the watery tomb are the bodies of four teenagers who disappeared thirty years ago after leaving a rock concert. To authorities, it looks like a tragic accident. To Sloan, it looks like murder. Every piece of evidence is starting to connect to a string of cold case vanishings throughout Florida. Clue by clue, Sloan navigates the warm, dark waters where natural predators feed, knowing that the most dangerous one is still above the surface - nesting and dormant. But when a fresh young kill is found in the Everglades, Sloan fears that her investigation has reawakened a monster. How can she catch someone who'...;s a genius at hiding in plain sight? By acting as prey. The dangerous gambit is working - only too well. She's being lured into a deception of the madman's own design. Has Sloan set a trap for a serial killer? Or has he set one for her?"--Publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Thrillers (Fiction)
Detective and mystery fiction
Published
Seattle : Thomas & Mercer [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Andrew Mayne, 1973- (author)
Physical Description
308 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781542009645
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In Thriller Award--finalist Mayne's exciting sequel to 2020's The Girl Beneath the Sea, Det. Sloan McPherson, a diver for the Florida Underwater Investigation Unit, joins a team looking into a series of burglaries in which navigational equipment worth millions of dollars has been stolen from yachts in the Miami area. Meanwhile, the unit is called to retrieve a body trapped in a car that nose-dived into a pond. In the course of her dive, Sloan discovers a van containing four bodies. Her search into the identity of the victims leads to a serial killer who has been on the rampage for more than a decade. Soon, though, Sloan's team is sidelined by political squabbles with other units, she's temporarily suspended, and she must engage in a dangerous undercover assignment. Mayne's portrayal of the Everglades ecosystem and its inhabitants serves as a fascinating backdrop for the detective work. Readers will hope the spunky Sloan returns soon. Agent: Erica Silverman, Trident Media Group. (Feb.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A chance discovery in an alligator-infested pond sets diver Sloan McPherson, of Florida's Underwater Investigation Unit, on the path of a monstrous serial killer. Tasked with retrieving a corpse from a car that's run into Pond 65, Sloan dodges the resident amphibians long enough to emerge successful. In the process, she finds something far more horrifying: a sunken van that a more extended second dive reveals is the final resting place of four teenagers who vanished 30 years ago. It would be bad enough if their deaths were the result of reckless acting out, but it looks more and more like murder times four. Informed of Sloan's discovery by her boss, UIU head George Solar, the victims' parents act out their grief by yelling at each other as Sloan watches, eager to move on. But although Florida's waterways offer apparently endless riches for underwater investigations, this case won't let her go. Ethan Rafferty, a schoolmate who hung out with the four victims half a lifetime ago, fingers a possible perpetrator: Sleazy Steve, who he's pretty sure got possessed by a demon they were all pursuing. The further along the trail to Sleazy Steve Sloan and Scott Hughes, the newest member of the UIU team, get, the uglier the case looks and the hungrier other law enforcement agencies are for a piece of it. At length, Sloan's hot-trigger reaction to a particularly condescending Broward County detective gets her booted off the task force, then placed on administrative leave, even as she discovers more and more victims. A relentless nail-biter whether below or above the waterline. Even the setbacks are suspenseful. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.