From Publishers Weekly
Too tame to be a thriller but too lacking in romantic tension to be a romance, this newest offering from Sawyer (Every Waking Moment, etc.) is difficult to categorize. It is a novel of extremes, in one instance depicting the wild world of surfing in Kauai and in another following the intense hunt for a San Francisco serial killer who targets successful women. Although the transition in setting won't jar readers, the change in tone will. Herald newspaper columnist Jessica Crawford first meets Cole Rawlings in Kauai, where she learns that there are two types of orgasms-the sexual kind and the surfing kind. The two share a few frenzied moments experiencing both and then go their separate ways, only to meet up at the Herald, where Cole has taken a position as investigative reporter. Though the two are cold toward each other initially, the search for the serial killer brings them together. It's obvious Sawyer has done her homework-she throws in a number of superfluous details about notorious killers and the methodology of profiling-but her story falls short of riveting. An excess of information about Jessica's work, her friendships, her sad childhood, Cole's extremely sad childhood and the serial killer's hatred of "feminazis" bogs down the story. While some readers will appreciate the sharply drawn characters, others will grow impatient waiting for the suspense to heat up.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Too tame to be a thriller but too lacking in romantic tension to be a romance, this newest offering from Sawyer (Every Waking Moment, etc.) is difficult to categorize. It is a novel of extremes, in one instance depicting the wild world of surfing in Kauai and in another following the intense hunt for a San Francisco serial killer who targets successful women. Although the transition in setting won't jar readers, the change in tone will. Herald newspaper columnist Jessica Crawford first meets Cole Rawlings in Kauai, where she learns that there are two types of orgasms-the sexual kind and the surfing kind. The two share a few frenzied moments experiencing both and then go their separate ways, only to meet up at the Herald, where Cole has taken a position as investigative reporter. Though the two are cold toward each other initially, the search for the serial killer brings them together. It's obvious Sawyer has done her homework-she throws in a number of superfluous details about notorious killers and the methodology of profiling-but her story falls short of riveting. An excess of information about Jessica's work, her friendships, her sad childhood, Cole's extremely sad childhood and the serial killer's hatred of "feminazis" bogs down the story. While some readers will appreciate the sharply drawn characters, others will grow impatient waiting for the suspense to heat up.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Used availability for Meryl Sawyer's Lady Killer
See all available used copies of this book at: Abebooks UK or Abebooks US
Hardback Editions
2004 : Hardback
| Title: Lady Killer Author(s): Meryl Sawyer ISBN: 0-7394-4135-3 / 978-0-7394-4135-0 (USA edition) Publisher: Zebra 2004/04 Availability: Amazon More details... |
Paperback Editions
April 2004 : Mass Market Paperback
| Title: Lady Killer Author(s): Meryl Sawyer ISBN: 0-8217-7213-9 / 978-0-8217-7213-3 (USA edition) Publisher: Zebra Availability: Amazon Amazon UK Amazon CA More details... |
January 1987 : Paperback
| Title: Lady Killer Author(s): Meryl Sawyer Publisher: Jove Availability: Amazon More details... |
© 2012 FantasticFiction
Questions? Comments? Corrections? Please email webmaster@fantasticfiction.co.uk
Questions? Comments? Corrections? Please email webmaster@fantasticfiction.co.uk

