I’ve read a few books by Peter James, but only three of his Roy Grace books, Simply Dead, the first book in the series, Not Dead Enough, the third one and now Looking Good Dead, the second book (and one of my TBRs).
Synopsis from Fantastic Fiction
Tom Bryce did what any decent person would do. But within hours of picking up the CD that had been left behind on the train seat next him, and attempting to return it to its owner, he is the sole witness to a vicious murder. Then his young family are threatened with their lives if he goes to the police. But supported by his wife, Kellie, he bravely makes a statement, to the murder enquiry team headed by Detective Superintendent Roy Grace, a man with demons of his own – including his missing wife – to contend with. And from that moment, the killing of the Bryce family becomes a mere formality – and a grisly attraction. Kellie and Tom’s deaths have already been posted on the internet. You can log on and see them on a website. They are looking good dead. ‘Destined for the bestsellers’ – “Independent on Sunday”. ‘A terrific tale of greed, seduction and betrayal’ – “Daily Telegraph”.
My thoughts:
It really is necessary to read these books in order because although each one is a complete murder mystery, they tell the continuing story of Roy Grace’s personal life and the mystery of his missing wife, Sandy. She had disappeared eight years earlier than the events described in the first book and had never been found. When all the usual sources had failed to find her he had turned to psychics and mediums for help, which he does again in this case.
As I wrote in my WWW Wednesday this book is set in Brighton and Peter James describes the setting in detail which slows the action down somewhat, but apart from that it’s fast paced. Tom is on a disastrous course as soon as he puts the CD into into his computer in an attempt to identify the man who left it on the train. The CD directs him to a site where he witnesses a murder and then he and his family also become targets for the killer and the tension immediately rises and culminates in the most terrifying scenes by the end of the book. I raced through it, trying not to visualise the gruesome details and impatient whenever the action moved away from the murder mystery, keen to find out whether Tom and his family would survive.
- Format: Kindle Edition
- File Size: 2117 KB
- Print Length: 428 pages
- Publisher: Pan; New Edit/Cover edition (4 Sept. 2008)
- My Rating: 3.5*
- Source: I bought it
The 16th book in this series, Find Them Dead will be published in July.
Peter James does know how to keep the pace going and keep the reader interested, Margaret. That’s one thing that I like about this series. And I agree about reading the novels in order. You can read the mysteries themselves as separate entities, but the story arcs about Grace’s personal life (and those of some of the other ‘regular’ characters) are a lot more appealing and easier to follow if you read the books in order.
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Yes, Margot and In this series I’m hooked because I I really want to know what happened to Sandy.
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I’ve listened to quite a number of these as audio books and they work really well in that format I think. The pace is good, the detail of the police procedures is fascinating and of course James does a fab job of portraying the seedy side of Brighton. The only thing I don’t like – his relationship with his new girlfriend.I think she’s called Cleo…..
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I don’t like his relationship with with Cleo either.
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