Review by Booklist Review
Hot Rod and the Pistons are reuniting for induction into the Iowa Rock n' Roll Hall of Fame. All the band members are in their fifties. Some stayed in the music business, gigging in local bands, while others found more conventional ways to make a living. But rock never forgets, and the groupies, sexual tensions, and professional jealousies remain front and center. Things take a tragic turn when two of the band members die, apparently suicides. Police chief Krista Larson and her father, Keith, a former police detective, investigate. The suicide angle seems iffy. The men seemed excited to reunite with their bandmates. Keith, as a young man a lifetime ago, was the group's sound man. Krista and Keith dig into the band's history and quickly realize these men weren't Keith's youthful pals. The intraband dynamics included drug use and blackmail. In this follow-up to Girl Most Likely (2019), Collins, best-selling author of Road to Perdition (1998) and multiple crime series, nails the vernacular of the music world as well as the ambitions of small-timers who never came to terms with their failure to realize big-time dreams.--Wes Lukowsky Copyright 2020 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
When Hot Rod and the Pistons, an '80s rock cover band, learn they will be inducted into the Iowa Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame in MWA Grand Master Collins's unimpressive sequel to 2019's Girl Most Likely, a reunion concert is scheduled in Galena, Ill. The Pistons reunion provides an old follower a chance to exact revenge for something terrible the band did to her back in 1984--something a Piston captured on film. Angel Baby, as she was nicknamed back in the day, parties with one of the band members after the show and poisons him with an untraceable drug. She then steals his copy of the tape and makes the death look like a suicide. But as Angel Baby continues to poison the band members one by one, Galena police chief Krista Larson becomes suspicious and decides to enlist the aid of her retired police detective father, who used to be the band's roadie. Though the killings are staged skillfully enough, the dull characters (including Krista), endless references to rock history, and bland prose combine to flatline the story. By the time the action picks up late in the book, readers will have already tuned out. Collins's fans can take a pass on this one. Agent: Dominick Abel, Dominick Abel Literary. (Mar.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
The reunion of Hot Rod and the Pistons on the occasion of their induction into the Iowa Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame is blighted by a woman who seems determined to reduce their numbers to the vanishing point.Back in the 1980s, lots of band members did lots of foolish things, some of them immoral and downright vicious. At least one member of the Pistons, lead guitarist Rick Jonsen, did something so terrible to one female groupie nicknamed Angel Baby that when she finds out after the reunion concert that it was captured on videotape, she feeds Rick a fatal dose of succinylcholine and grabs the tape. A year later, back in the band's hometown of Galena, Illinois, rhythm guitarist Danny Davies indicates that he shot the offending video, and minutes after he makes a thinly disguised blackmail pitch, he meets the same fate, this time disguised to look like a suicide. Since the two deaths took place so far apart in time and space, no one suspects anything except for Galena Police Chief Krista Larson (Girl Most Likely, 2017), who goes so far as to engage her father, retired Dubuque homicide detective Keith Larson, as a consultant. As if in response to her suspicions, another party emerges to attempt blackmail on such remarkably similar terms that you'd think the would-be extortionists had been issued the same instruction manualone that must have been seriously defective, since this one ends up equally dead. Faced with the very real possibility that Rodney Penniston and the rest of the Pistons will soon be no more than a memory, Krista and her dad hunker down and manage to stop Angel Baby seconds before another homicidal act on an even grander scale.The primacy of music over mystery makes this one mainly for rockabilly fans. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.