“Fans of Karen Slaughter will find Haseldine’s crime
fiction rewarding, and it’s also a good balance to another excellent Detroit
series from Stephen Mack Jones; of course there’s also a hint of Loren D.
Estleman’s Motor City mysteries here, too.”
The fourth in Jane
Haseldine’s Julia Gooden mystery series, You
Fit the Pattern, resumes after her major scoop of discovering the truths in
her own family: her much-loved brother’s childhood abduction, his killer (found
by Julia 30 years after the crime), and the devastating role their father
played in the crimes.
Meanwhile, active crimes in
Detroit have spun out of control while Julia was swamped in her own detection.
There’s a killer seizing woman joggers, creating a pattern of highly planned
and horrific deaths for them. When Julia realizes the serial killer is picking
out women who resemble her, enacting over and over a both a passion for her and
a deadly obsession, she can’t help feeling responsible—and so, driven to take
risks to bring the murderer out of hiding.
Also at stake, of course, is
the safety of Julia’s young sons, already traumatized enough by the threats
that her career has brought into their lives. Thank goodness for her motherly
housekeeper Helen and for Julia’s increasing closeness to Detective Raymond
Navarro, both doing their best to keep her safe.
But when the killer’s routine
turns out to include a voodoo symbol, as well as items that make it clear he’s
stalking Julia and her family, things rapidly get very creepy. Soon the killer
even has a nickname: the Magic Man Killer.
The one plus to this
escalating mode of threat is, it pulls Julia and Navarro closer:
“Navarro sighed and ran his
fingers in frustration through his thick shock of dark hair.
“’You need to do something
for me. I’m not going to let you and your boys hang solo with all this going
down. I checked with my apartment manager. He has a vacant unit next to mine …
And I’ll be right there. I’m not going to discount that the killer knows where
you live. … please think about it.’
“’Okay. We’ll do it.’
“’Just like that? I don’t
have to fight you on this?’
“’Not this time. The Magic
Man Killer has got a direct line to me. I don’t know how close it is, but I
need to make sure he doesn’t get anywhere near my family.’”
But of course, safety’s not
that simple, especially when Julia’s own drive to investigate and get the story
become tangled with the creeps tracking her and trying to lure her in. Yes,
that’s creeps, plural. When the nasty part of the world opens up, there’s way
too much evil in there.
Haseldine’s narrative is
strong and direct, a good fit for her protagonist. With this fourth in the
series, Haseldine has clearly grown more adept at holding all the cards in her
hands, from threats to red herrings to cop-shop interference and the loyalties
that make live worth living. Fans of Karen Slaughter will find Haseldine’s
crime fiction rewarding, and it’s also a good balance to another excellent
Detroit series from Stephen Mack Jones; of course there’s also a hint of Loren
D. Estleman’s Motor City mysteries here, too.
There’s no need to read the
preceding titles first (The Last Time She
Saw Him; Duplicity; Worth Killing For). But the satisfaction of seeing this
sometimes gritty and always fast-paced series maturing makes it worth gathering
all four titles on the shelf, and watching for the next one.
PS: Looking for more mystery reviews, from cozy to very dark? Browse the Kingdom Books mysteries review blog here.
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PS: Looking for more mystery reviews, from cozy to very dark? Browse the Kingdom Books mysteries review blog here.
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