Review by Booklist Review
When high-school principal Debra Highsmith disappears, and her body is later found by Cochise County Sheriff Joanna Brady's daughter, Jenny, Joanna investigates. Matters are muddied when Jenny sends a friend a crime scene photo that quickly becomes widely disseminated on the Internet, even before the victim's family has been notified. Joanna soon learns that Highsmith had been using the identity of a long-deceased child. Is her murder connected to her past or to a more recent student suspension that angered the student and his father? With little to go on, Joanna and her team conduct their investigation and are finally able to learn more about Highsmith from her best friend and her grandmother. After a further murder, the chase is on in earnest, and Joanna finds she must deal with a killer who doesn't seem to care whether he lives or dies. The fast-paced story intertwines procedural detail and Joanna's family life in a satisfying whole.--O'Brien, Sue Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
In bestseller Jance's satisfying 15th novel of suspense featuring Cochise County, Ariz., sheriff Joanna Brady (after 2009's Fire and Ice), Brady's 15-year-old daughter, Jenny, discovers her high school principal, Debra Highsmith, shot to death in the desert near their family home. Jenny phones Brady, who hops on her horse and rides to the crime scene. Who might have wanted to kill the extremely private Highsmith, who appears to have had no friends and no next of kin? When a second murder follows within as many days, Brady really has her hands full, especially since important intel about the crimes is hitting the Internet even before she can begin lining up suspects. Meanwhile, Brady's trying her best to juggle the life-or-death circumstances of her job with a private life. Jance smoothly intertwines the threads of multiple subplots, complete with a red herring or two. The solution to a 25-year-old mystery surrounding the death of Joanna's father is a bonus. 10-city author tour. Agent: Alice Volpe, Northwest Literary Agency. (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review
No matter how hard she tries to keep her 15th case strictly professional, Cochise County sheriff Joanna Brady (Damage Control, 2008, etc.) just can't keep it all from coming back on, and to, her family. Joanna's latest case begins on an uncomfortably intimate note with a phone call from her daughter Jenny, 16, saying that she's found a body while she was out riding her horse up High Lonesome Road. And not just any body: The bullet-riddled corpse, already savaged by buzzards and coyotes, is that of Debra Highsmith, the principal of Jenny's high school. To Joanna's consternation, Marty Pembroke, a student who protested his suspension by adorning his Facebook page with a photo of Debra labeled, "DIE, BITCH!," has been able to post a photo of her corpse tagged "BITCH DIES" because Jenny snapped it while waiting for Joanna and sent it to Cassie Parks, the best bud who'd been snubbing her, and Cassie sent it to everyone else in Arizona. How can Joanna ask her archenemy, columnist Marliss Shackleford, to keep the victim's identity confidential till her next of kin is notified when (a) her own daughter has been responsible for plastering the image all over the Web and (b) Debra doesn't seem to have any next of kin--her emergency contact is her secretary, Abby Holder, and she's left no paper trail to speak of in her time on earth? Another murder in an unexpected venue will shed so much light on the case that Joanna will confront the forgettable killer with 60 pages still to go. It's not until after the perp's arrest that the tale really hits its stride, with a series of revelations that turn most of the story into so much prologue. As usual, Joanna's domestic problems are more interesting than her caseload. This time, however, fans of the franchise will be rewarded by seeing the two come together with a satisfying jolt.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.