"Strong mystery"
In the small Northern California town of Dunsley, Irene
Stenson missed curfew because her best friend Pamela Webb
deliberately kept her out late. When she finally arrives
home she sees the murdered bodies of her parents on the
kitchen floor. Their deaths were deemed murder-suicide
and Irene left town and never returned or spoke to Pamela. Seventeen years later, Pamela e-mails Irene asking her to
come back to Dunsley because she has something important
to tell her. She checks in at the Sunrise on the Lake
Lodge and is immediately attracted to the owner Luke
Danner who finds himself very interested in his boarder.
When Irene arrives at Pamela's house, she finds her former
friend dead, a bottle of empty pills and liquor near the
body. The sheriff rules it a suicide but from the urgency
of Pamela's message Irene thinks she was murdered. As a
reporter she starts her own investigation because she
believes there is a link between her parents' deaths and
Pamela's demise. Luke helps her and saves her life quite
a few times because it is obvious someone is willing to
kill to keep Pamela's secret hidden. A Jayne Ann Krentz novel is always a joy too read and ALL
NIGHT LONG is no exception. The protagonists are drawn
true to life and are not as quirky as Ms. Krentz's
characters usually are but that is because they are
dealing with dark, troubling and dangerous situations and
emotions. The mystery is very complex and filled with red
herrings and unusual twists and turns. There is a
secondary character, one of Luke's brothers, who deserves
his own story. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted December 27, 2005
SummaryThe smaller the town, the darker the secrets...
Shy, studious Irene Stenson and wild, privileged Pamela Webb
had been the best of friends for one short high school
summer. Their friendship ended the night Pamela dropped
Irene off at homeand Irene walked in to discover her
parents' bodies on the kitchen floor. It was ruled a
murder-suicide, and Irene fled the northern California town
of Dunsley. But seventeen years later, when Pamela sends a
cryptic e-mail asking for help, Irene returns to her
hometown to find her old friend has died suddenly, leaving
behind a lot of ugly, unanswered questions.
Caught up in a firestorm of desperate deceit and long-buried
secrets, Irene knows it would probably be smarter to just
pack up and leave Dunsley behind again, but her reporter's
instinctand her own hunger to know the
truthcompel her to extend her stay at the local lodge.
Even more compelling is the man who runs the placea
hazel-eyed ex-Marine who's as used to giving orders as Irene
is to ignoring them. Luke Danner can see the terror beneath
Irene Stenson's confident exteriorand he is intent on
protecting her. But he is also driven by passions of his
own, and together they will risk far more than local gossip
to sort out what happened to Pamela Webb, and what really
happened on that long-ago summer night. . . .
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