
“Claire waved a computer printout, said, ‘Toxicology was negative. No poison, no opiates, no narcotics, no nothing. Cause of death? No idea. Manner of death? No idea. Something stinks, and I don’t know what,’ she told us, ‘but the likelihood of these two individuals, with completely negative autopsies and completely negative toxicologies, expiring at the same time is statistically astronomical.'” (Page 111)
Meanwhile, Cindy Thomas uncovers the murder of Bagman Jesus, a local homeless man, who she believes is revered by his community. Investigating the murder becomes her obsession, but she also finds herself tied up in another passion — Richie Conklin, Lindsay’s partner and secret desire.
Readers will see the sparks fly between these friends and between the sheets in this thriller. Unfortunately, there seems to be too much of a focus on the bedroom, and very little focus on the investigation — whether Lindsay is mulling over her feelings for Rich or her love for Joe, her live-in boyfriend. Once the focus is back on the killer, readers will be sucked into trying to uncover for themselves how the murders are being committed.
The audio, just like the book, is fast-paced. However, 8th Confession is not as strong as some of the other books in this series.
This is my 12th book for the 2010 Thriller & Suspense Reading Challenge.




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Diana M. Raab‘s The Guilt Gene is a collection steeped in nostalgia that fails to glorify the past. The collection is broken down into six sections: “Cherry Blossoms, Book Tour, Two Evils, The Devil Wears a Poem, 

The Wrong Miracle by Liz Gallagher uses tongue twisting phrases and juxtaposition to shed light on and deal with the expectations of family and society. Wrong miracles occur everyday in Gallagher’s world from the cat that drags in a poem it found to a breeze that cracks the narrator open. Gallagher’s playful phrases will have readers smiling in amusement, and she enjoys turning cliches upside down.
About the Poet: (Photo Credit: Vladi Valido)
Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni‘s One Amazing Thing is brilliant in its ability to capture reader’s attention and hold it throughout the narrative as the points of view change and characters share a life-changing moment. Divakaruni’s writing places readers in the room with her characters and traps them there, making the terror of their impending doom real. Each character is at the visa office seeking papers to travel back to India when something happens and causes the building to partially collapse upon them.
About the Author:

About the Author:
Charlaine Harris‘s Club Dead is the third book in the southern vampire series, which I’m reading for the 




