- Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?
- Yes. Although there is not any depth in the series compares to other mystery/detective novels I prefer, it is an entertaining listen.
- Would you be willing to try another book from JD Nixon? Why or why not?
- I am going to continue with the series and see where it goes. If the next book doesn’t have a real “plot” that requires some cerebral challenge, I don’t know that I will continue with the series.
- Which scene was your favorite?
- Envisioning the butt/nutt kicking experience with the poligimist preacher where Tillie makes him tell his “wives” what he had done to/attempted to do to her made me laugh. Later when Tillie receives a gift and a note from the wives explaining how much different (for the better) their lives were was nice.
- Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?
- The private moments between Tillie and Heller are interesting. At times you get the impression Heller seems to care for Tillie as a little sister he has the obligation to to protect because he loves her as family. However a quickly as you can blink, the sexual tension goes from 0 to 100+ . Can they have the kind of relationship needed to work together with Heller firmly in control as a boss, or will they ever give into their physician desires? I’m not sure Tillie has the maturity to separate the two feelings if this were to happen. And, Tillie has yet to understand that Hillers interest in her private life may actually be due to threats to his security business and knowing that his rivals would stoop so low as to use Tillies naïveté to breach the warehouses inner sanctum.
- Any additional comments?
- I have to wonder if this author might be Annelise Ryan using another pen name. Tillie and Maddie Winston (the main female character in Ryan’s series) have so many silularities i.e. height, weight, ample bosom, shoe size, attitudes and phraseology. The characters and verbiage are so similar, not to mention the same narrator, it makes me wonder. And, the more I listen, the more I am sure the writers are one and the same
Review from Heller →
