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NIGHT FLIGHT TO PARIS

Strictly for action/adventure fans.

Sharpshooter Kate Rees returns to the City of Lights for a longer but no less harrowing mission than she had in Three Hours in Paris (2020).

After losing her husband and daughter in a German airstrike, Kate wants nothing more than to avenge her family’s death on every Nazi within range. The skills with a rifle she developed growing up in rural Oregon paired with the ease of disguising her as a housewife or nurse make her a favorite sniper of the War Department’s Alfred Stepney. Before sending her back to Paris with the task of taking out Kurt Lange, Gen. Rommel’s right-hand man, Stepney reminds her to trust no one. But that warning places serious constraints on Black’s mission as a storyteller. As characters flash by—Dieter von Holz, the RAF pilot who ferries Kate to Paris; German double agent Jaro; Polish freedom fighter Odile; her liaison in Paris, Richards, who escorts her to British HQ in Cairo; her Cairo guide, Sasha; and shrewd belly dancer Nadira—Kate doesn’t really connect with anyone. If no one can be trusted, readers have no one to root for. Black packs lots of action and rich local color into her tale of danger. But without characters to invest in, readers may be left with what amounts to an album of travel photos: exotic and colorful but with nothing to harness the heart.

Strictly for action/adventure fans.

Pub Date: March 7, 2023

ISBN: 9781641293556

Page Count: 336

Publisher: Soho Crime

Review Posted Online: Feb. 22, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2023

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WE ARE ALL GUILTY HERE

Although it lacks the surgical precision of Slaughter’s very best nightmares, this one richly earns its title.

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  • New York Times Bestseller

More than a decade after a Georgia man is convicted of a monstrous double murder, an uncomfortably similar crime frees him and resets the search for the guilty party.

In Clifton County, home to the Rich Cliftons and the other Cliftons, the disappearance of teens Madison Dalrymple and Cheyenne Baker during the Halloween festivities hits everyone in North Falls hard. Working with her father, Sheriff Gerald Clifton, Deputy Emmy Lou Clifton hears the clock ticking down as she races frantically to get leads on the two friends, who’d been secretly plotting to take off for Atlanta after some undisclosed big score. As a longtime friend of Madison’s mother, Hannah, Emmy hopes against hope to find the missing teens before they’re both dead. By the time Emmy’s hopes are dashed, two unpleasantly likely suspects with strong attachments to underage sex partners have emerged, and one of them ends up in prison. In a bold move, Slaughter jumps over the next 12 years to the case of Paisley Walker, a 14-year-old whose disappearance catches the eye of retiring FBI criminal psychologist Jude Archer, who promptly crosses the country to come to Clifton County and take charge—um, that is, consult—on this heartrending new investigation. Emmy, suddenly and shockingly deprived of counsel from the parents who’ve supported her all her life, doesn’t get along any better with Jude than with the larger circle of Cliftons and the Clifton-Cliftons. But together they identify one new suspect, then another, before a shootout that arrives so early you just know there are still more surprises to come.

Although it lacks the surgical precision of Slaughter’s very best nightmares, this one richly earns its title.

Pub Date: Aug. 12, 2025

ISBN: 9780063336773

Page Count: 448

Publisher: Morrow/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: May 16, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2025

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A MURDER MOST FRENCH

Neither the characters nor the mystery makes nearly as much of an impression as the setting and the cuisine.

More accurately, Four Murders Most French, since none of the homicides entangling Julia Child’s circle in postwar Paris seems any more Gallic than the others.

Joining Julia at a tasting during a monthly meeting of her wine club at L’École du Cordon Bleu, her neighbor, friend, and amanuensis Tabitha Knight is on hand to watch Chef Richard Beauchêne taste his very last wine, an 1893 Volnay Clos de la Rougeotte that he samples just before keeling over. Cyanide, thinks Tabitha, whose determination to stay away from anymore murders is on a collision course with her sense that she’s channeling Agatha Christie. Although Inspecteur Étienne Merveille wholeheartedly endorses her reluctance to get involved, she’s left with little choice after she recognizes Louis Loyer at another event as the chef who was arguing with Beauchêne on the evening of his last libation only moments before Loyer uncorks an 1871 Sauternes that turns out to be his last round as well. Assuming that the two poisonings (more will follow) can’t be a coincidence, Tabitha wonders if it’s a coincidence that she’s been on the scene for both of them and begins to make a cautious list of other people who were present for both deaths. Considering that she’s not much more interested in the suspects than her author, Tabitha does a highly effective job of identifying the culprit and tipping her hand in a way that forces her once again to employ her Swiss Army knife to rescue herself from certain death.

Neither the characters nor the mystery makes nearly as much of an impression as the setting and the cuisine.

Pub Date: April 23, 2024

ISBN: 9781496739629

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Kensington

Review Posted Online: Jan. 20, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2024

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