Cover Image: Honor Kills

Honor Kills

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Member Reviews

Gripping and suspenseful! A very well-written book with wonderfully-interesting characters. The tension builds at just the right pace as the story unfolds. Will keep you swiping the pages furiously. Worthy of your TBR list.

*I received a complimentary ARC of this book from in order to read and provide a voluntary and honest review, should I choose to do so.

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While I enjoyed this book it didn't take me long to realise that it would have added to considerably to my enjoyment had I read the first two installments before embarking upon this one. Never the less, I did enjoy reading all about Hank's spineless behaviour, his secrecy, lies and indiscretions. I enjoyed Angie's dogged conviction as she endeavoured to reveal the truth. I really liked Marcy too I must admit and I thought the ending was a good one, unpredictable, that answered all my queries and left no stone unturned. It was a good read but I really wish I'd read the previous two first as I think it'd have gotten so much more from this book.

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Synopsis/blurb...

A missing husband. A suspicious obituary. She’s not the only one hunting down a dead man’s footsteps.

As a divorcee, Angelina Bonaparte knows firsthand the lengths some men will go to escape responsibility. When a worried mother wants the private investigator to track down her missing husband, she’s eager to bring the deadbeat dad to justice. But even after she discovers the man’s obituary, she refuses to believe it until she sees the body. Tracking down the nurse who last saw him alive could be the missing puzzle piece to her client's broken family.

But as she digs deeper, she realizes there’s something darker at play than dodging child support payments. And she may not be the only one hunting the man down. To close the case and reunite her client's family, she must track down the missing husband without falling prey to the same ruthless hunter.

Honor Kills is the third book in the captivating Angelina Bonaparte Mysteries series. If you like bold female detectives, edge-of-your-seat suspense, and unexpected twists, then you’ll love Nanci Rathbun’s gripping novel.
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My take....

My second outing with Nanci Rathbun and her fifty-something PI Angelina Bonaparte, and a more enjoyable experience second time around after reading Cash Kills earlier this year.

We have a missing persons case which has been unsolved for a few years and which is the only one Angelina never resolved. Her and intern Bobby, keep an eye open for death notices and the like in an effort to bring closure to her client and her family. One day out of the blue, one appears, but as far as Angelina is concerned it's a bit too convenient.

More digging follows, and like peeling layers from an onion, Angelina uncovers multiple identities and a man running, not so much from his family, but from a previous life before he met the women he loved. Trying to broker a deal between the man, his estranged family and his former employer's via her father proves complicated and unsuccessful. Things take a dark turn. There will be no happy ending for her client. Angelina now has a new focus on finding out who betrayed her.

I liked this one a bit more than the earlier book in the series, though at the time I read that I was a tad stressed. There's a likable quality to Angelina, she's tenacious, determined, honest to a fault and she gets the job done. We also experience the trials and tribulations of her personal life with her extended family and the serious relationship with her cop boyfriend. Here it is fair to say the course of true love never did run smooth. No pity party for Angelina though, she picks herself up, dusts herself off and carries on. There's a decent balance to the amount of professional and personal on display.

I enjoyed the investigation into our missing person, the peripheral characters we encountered along the way, the nuggets of information that were gradually uncovered, the help received from some serious and seriously capable contacts - encountered in our earlier book, the conversations with her father and the bruising encounters with her lawyer and his secretary. I did guess who gave the game away. I probably would have been more Old Testament in my desire to punish the guilty, Angie is a bit more forgiving and philosophical than I am, more mature.

Overall - enjoyable with a decent pace. Still maybe a bit too much information divulged regarding a fifty years plus lady's undergarments - I have a very delicate constitution!

4 from 5

Nanci Rathbun has written three mysteries so far - Truth Kills, Cash Kills and Honor Kills.

Read in November, 2018
Published -2018
Page count - 286
Source - Net Galley copy originally which expired, second copy from author.
Format - kindle

https://col2910.blogspot.com/2018/11/nanci-rathbun-honor-kills-2018.html

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PI Angie Bonaparte reactivates a missing person's case from six years previously when an obituary appears in the paper for Hank Wagner. After emptying his bank account, Wagner left his wife and their three children and disappeared. Angie is determined to find out more about why Wagner left a seemingly happy marriage and disappeared. The investigation leads somewhere that not even Angie expected.

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I wasn’t sure what to expect from this book - especially as I didn’t realise it was number three in the series, but I started to read and got engrossed, very engrossed!

Angie Boneparte (Bone-ah-part-eh) set up a private investigation business when her marriage ended, she and her intern (Bobbie) have an on-going case. A few years back a school teacher just up and left, emptied out the bank account and disappeared! When the police drew a blank as to where he ended up his wife (Marcy) engaged AB-Investigations and whilst nothing was found at the time Angie keeps going back to the case as something new may have cropped up, and it is something new that sets the story in motion.

The action is slow to get going at first but then WHAM and there is no stopping it, this isn’t a cozy mystery but nor is it all blood and gore (thankfully - I am not so keen on those!), but what it is, is a riveting story and I now want to read the first two to find out how Angie got to where she is. If you enjoy a lightish murder mystery then read this - you (hopefully) won’t be disappointed.

NB - I was lucky enough to read an advance copy from NetGalley

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I liked the plot of this book and it looked promising but as I read on I felt myself more and more disinterested in it.

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In some ways, a decent story. I read it all in one sitting. BUT, whoever compared Angie with Stephanie Plum, whoever thinks these stories are like Robert B. Parker's Spenser--is crazy. There's not enough humor to make those comparisons. There's too much of the author rambling about clothes or British TV shows. To many extraneous details that slow down the plot. I could edit out about 20% of the fluff and have a much better read. Then I would beef up the emotions and action. I wouldn't go out of my way to read this author again. Too tame, little high tension, too many words spent on the wrong things.

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