I grabbed this book for a quick, light read over the holidays and was very disappointed. I was not expecting a riveting mystery but I was expecting much more than I was given. The plot was predictable and the main character, Lily Forrester was horrible. This was one of the few books I've read ...
Silly book. The best character is the serial killer! Lily is horrible, self-centered, annoying (maybe I should be a lesbian), and obviously cannot be without a relationship for one minute. Mary is only slightly better--meets Brooks and falls in love immediately and starts planning relocation (...
This book started out so well. There was the premise that a serial killerwas taking advantage of people who signed up as members of a suicide clubs. The main character,Lily, is a judge presiding over the case of a beautiful, young, single mother accused of locking her toddler in the trunk of he...
Quit after 100 pages. Perplexing writing, including some sentences that didn't really follow the rules of that pesky formula of "correct grammar," and paragraph upon paragraph of non sequitur explanations of non-existent questions, as well as endless descriptions of appearances and characters who...
I ordered this book from PaperbackSwap because it kept resurfacing in "books you may like"...which is also how I find friends on Facebook, actually. Apparently, Nancy Taylor Rosenberg is a police detective with the LAPD AND an author. Her work with the police force makes the dialogue and the plot...
In the first installment of the Carolyn Sullivan series by Nancy Taylor Rosenberg, Sullivan's Law, we were introduced to Carolyn Sullivan, a take-no-charge probation officer for the Ventura Police Department. She was also a single mother of two kids with a pile of work on her desk and a mountain ...
Wow. Just...wow. This was a free Kindle read, and I didn't read it as much as skim. It is so poorly written that I kept marveling that it was ever published. The main character is a probation officer/law student/single mother dynamo, the kind of probation officer who isn't afraid to lock hers...
I am a skeptical reader, questioning the actions of every character (would someone really do that?), the plot (how likely is that?), and even the dialogue (does anyone actually speak that way?). It might come from reading too much high literature, but I doubt it. Could be a diet too rich in true ...
Ann Carlisle is a gutsy, no-holds-barred probation officer who seems to attract bad situations everywhere she goes. From getting shot in the beginning of the novel to dealing with rough clients…one in particular is a drug dealer...Ann is always ready for anything. She does have some “human” quali...