"Excellent Evan Evans' police procedural"
Detective Constable Evan Evans knows first hand what it
means to move someone as he has lugged the junk (don't
tell her that) of his fiancée Bronwen up Mount Snowdon's
mountainside to their cottage. On one of his treks he
meets Paul Upfield, who says he is searching for his
seventeen year old girlfriend Shannon Parkinson who he
raced ahead of hiking down the mountainside; she never
caught up and he never found her when he turned back to
look. Instead of finding the missing teen, the K-9 dogs uncover
a concealed underground bunker including handcuffs hanging
down from a ceiling beam. Soon Evan begins receiving
sheet music containing enigmatic clues. The police
struggle with too many people and no viable suspect.
While Evan continues his investigation, a strange twist
occurs when Bronwen disappears with the music writer
sending notes that she is now a prisoner. Whereas before
he was duty intense to rescue the girl now he is obsessed
to save his beloved and the teen. The long running Evan Evans' police procedural is
refreshed with this fine cat and mouse tale as this time
the case turns personal. The story line grips the
audience from the beginning when a frantic Paul explains
to Evan that his girlfriend is lost on Snowdon and never
takes time off as the hero begins to believe he is the
ultimate target in a cat and mouse encounter. Rhys Bowen
shows why she is one of the best mystery writers today
with this excellent tale. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted August 16, 2005
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