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Sunday, January 10, 2016

5 Stars for the "Jasper, Street-Fighter, and Me" series

Another 5 Star Review

For

Serial Doesn't Start with a C

Episode 3
of the exciting and fun 

Jasper, Street-Fighter, and Me

Read the review right here!!!

By Lisa Karlin on January 9, 2016

Format: Kindle Edition


Episode 3 of the Jasper, Street-Fighter and Me series is titled “Serial Doesn’t Start with a C.” This episode includes a preface that refreshes the reader’s memory about the protagonist of the series, Private Investigator Maggie McKenzie, and her “colleagues,” her mutt Jasper and her alley cat named Street Fighter. This time it’s another serial rapist/murder case. Maggie’s boyfriend Detective Jim Anderson is back as well. A perpetrator dubbed the “Tri-State Fruitloop” is thought to be responsible for multiple rapes and murders; hence Maggie’s first thought that “Serial Doesn’t Start with a C.” This newest case involves Maddy and Patty, 28-year-old identical twins, who seem to have “disappeared off the face of the earth.” Their mother, Mrs. Carson, contacts Maggie for assistance in locating them after the police aren’t interested in finding the twins because there is no evidence of a crime having taken place. The reader begins to wonder if it’s the Tri-State Fruitloop who might have something to do with their disappearance. Or is it “strange bird” Detective Mullcaney, who previously worked in six different departments, that is involved or has information he’s not disclosing? What clues lie in the twins’ bedroom, which is not a room shared by two sisters, but “a room shared by a loving couple”? When Maggie goes on a run, she suspects she’s being followed, which adds to the mystery of what’s going on? Maggie then delves into the search for the missing twins, including financial and social media accounts, and finds nothing to suggest the twins have disappeared on their own. Are there two more bodies out there? Has the Tri-State Fruitloop struck again? Keep reading this series to find out if Maggie and Jim are able to apprehend the person/people responsible (I don’t want to give away the story line). Series author Richard Nurse has kept up the momentum and suspense in his series with “Serial Doesn’t Start with a C.” It’s another enjoyable, fast-paced read. I received a free copy of the book in exchange for a non-reciprocal honest review.

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