The carousel of sin and crime turns firm and suggests in particular San Francisco huge capers. Well, that take care of four girls, but has the Women's Murder Club prescribed not only fun but also put the frustration of crime and prosecuting criminals on the club's flags. Just now is the seventh part of themselves by counting series, "7th Heaven", released in paperback. And, again, is the proven Patterson / Paetro: the more is not enough! But while the heart of the investigator Boxer soon with excitement in the 'ga-Lopp, Lopp-ga, ga-Lopp' jumps, the kind reader suppressed a yawn.
bad guys go. They burn down not only luxury villas and left next to dead spouses Latin Sayings - no - snub in her spare time she also low, foreboding girls. Sergeant Lindsay Boxer and her extremely attractive partner will determine Conklin. But for now, they check the young prostitute Junie Moon. An anonymous note was received, someone wants the side months have seen missing son of the ex-governor on the night of his disappearance in June. Poor Michael Campion was suffering from a heart defect and criminal investigations of deduction could therefore suggest that the young man was taken away due to his illness in the arms of lust. At the very least, the matter be investigated. And amazingly, Junie Moon sets very soon from a confession: she had to die young Campion not only, but far worse things done.
Does not nice to the girls, this also withdraw immediately, but it is sure with such a media-oriented event already too late. Has long since Yuki Castellano, in turn, Lindsay's best friend and attorney, enter the stalls. Perhaps this should be their most serious case: a revoked confession, no witnesses, no evidence, even circumstantial evidence that speak against the accused, and no body! Yuki remains optimistic for the time being, were it not for the extremely seductive star author Twilly to pursue the goals seems strange. If Twilly still a 'fearsome grimace, cuts and inexplicably Yuki followed everywhere, the question arises whether this is allowed improper behavior insights into the true self of this man.
The process takes its course, the police called life, and Lindsay Conklin and go hunt down the arsonist, a loss from a crime scene to the next and need to partially 'travel to the netherworld of criminal work,' such as a pawnbroker. Meanwhile, the threat comes dangerously close to Lindsay. But partners Conklin is shrewd, and perhaps the answer lies dormant on the question - Who was it? - Yes, the internet.
Lindsay spent with all the exhausting investigations a lot of time with partner Conklin, of her passionate feelings she arouses in him, not long conceal. Such confessions can obviously cause confusion, but Lindsay just loves her lover Joe. And during this touching it cooks, the dog is running around the block at night is always there when Lindsay needs him in the head restlessly haunted Rich Conklin. Can the three friends, Yuki, who has the tough process and its star author himself enough problems, the top journalist Cindy or the clever, very pregnant Claire pathologist to help with Lindsay's love of confusion?
It appears that "7th Heaven" on heavy rotation built and remain just a game on time. Abstruse built motives and borrowing from film, literature and reality replace the act, with the duo in their only little time left seems to construct the text seriously. In the well-known brisk style, hunting and short little chapter verstraucheln a twist at the next roundabout way offside and annoying dead ends. The timing mocks spectacular rush, but seems rather due to a poorly disguised of imagination. The crazy spins, the triple showdown could have completed a narrative carousel still to light, can be amusing Midsummer Night's entertainment, but here are the evasions not incorporated sly virtuosity, but mysteriously confusing and arbitrary. And so despite all the hustle and bustle is a rather static text that completely stumbles without finesse or flair in the fake gallop to the finish.
James Patterson, Maxine Paetro: 7th Heaven (The 7th Heaven, 2008). Novel. German by Leo Strohm. New York: Del Rey 2010th 384 pages. € 8.99.
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