Liar, Liar by Winter Austin
If you follow my blog, you know
there are a few authors whose books I always read and always review because I
love them so much, i.e. Katie Kenyhercz, Nancy C. Winters, Nora Roberts, and
on. Which means you’ve already heard me
gush about Winter Austin and her books.
Tough, you have to sit through another one. Winter loves suspense, horses and
cowboys. Jeez, who wouldn’t right? And her upcoming release, Liar, Liar, is no exception.
She saved the best for last in
the final installment in the McIntire County series [can’t tell you how sad it
makes me this is the final book]. In
brief, Shane, the sheriff who appears in each book of this series, at fifty
years old gets his long overdue chance to be the hero in this book about
finding love with the least likely of people amidst some seriously screwed up
happenings. I mean this tiny town in Iowa has been riddled with horror for at
least four years and hopefully they’ll have some peace now.
Federal agent Liza Bartholomew,
Boyce’s former partner [remember him from Born
to Die?] is hot on the trail of the bad-guy that got away. Catching him is
her final goal before retiring and focusing on the needs of her family.
Unwelcome and poorly timed, tasked by a supervisor who openly dislikes and
disapproves of her with keeping her mission as low-key as possible, she’s
launched into the middle of a multiple murder investigation.
Oh and a sizzling hot
attraction to the sheriff du jour.
If you can’t tell, I really
enjoyed this book. Once I got started I couldn’t put it down. Winter is
incredibly talented at weaving together a story with such tense, frightening,
suspense and truly irredeemable bad guys, without ever going graphic with the
language, the violence, or the sex; and you never notice that those elements
are missing. In fact, I could pass this book to my thirteen year old daughter
with as little hesitation as I would pass it to my mother. And I’m gonna.
Keep an eye out for the twist
that managed not to just to surprise me (and I’ll be honest I am rarely
surprised by a plot twist in any book, movie or tv show – I have a knack for
figuring those things out way in advance of the big reveal) but the author said
surprised her too when she wrote it.
Five sad stars; because this is
the last book and only for that reason.
A cowboy sheriff and a
by-the-book FBI agent team up to solve a string of murders and arson in this
satisfying, slow-burning McIntire County series finale.
Returning to Eider, Iowa,
wasn’t in FBI agent Liza Bartholomew’s game plan, but when word reaches her
that an elusive scam artist she’s been tracking for years was spotted there,
she heads south. Vengeance for his victims and her career are on the line, and
she won’t rest until justice is served.
However, Eider’s sheriff makes
for one big roadblock. Between the fallout over his recent close re-election,
two gruesome homicides, a rash of arsons, and personal grief weighing on his
soul, the last thing Shane Hamilton has time for is a determined FBI agent in
his county.
But when it becomes evident
that the crime wave and her case are intertwined, Shane makes a bold move that
flies in the face of his longstanding vow: He gets close to Liza to share
professional and personal secrets.
As the body count mounts, Liza
and Shane find themselves and everyone they love in the immediate crosshairs.
What will they sacrifice to stop the cold-blooded killer in time?
Sensuality Level: Behind Closed Door
One
stop shop for buy links: Simon & Schuster buy links
Enjoy this excerpt from Liar, Liar:
Sober Saturday night number
836.
Sixteen years dry.
Enough time to move on, to
forget what happened that night sixteen years ago. Yet the anniversary would roll
around and he couldn’t stop the binge. Sipping on those memories, downing them
one after another, drowning in them until he was drunk. Letting her take him to
a dark place in his soul he could never purge. By dawn’s light, he was left
wasted and broken, a shell of a man, lying on the floor. Another piece of his
soul lost, buried with her in that cold, dark hole.
Shane Hamilton had lived in
this hell for so long, it became a ritual. Every April he prepared for it,
taking off the day of and the day after. Even during those bleak six years
where he was dodging bullets and bombs, he was swirling in a black abyss. This
year, the anniversary fell on Saturday.
Hands braced on the tile walls,
he watched the water snake along his body and pool at his bare feet. No matter
what effort he put in to cleansing his body, or mind and soul, the water never
baptized him from his sins.
Twinkling under the harsh
electric light, the slim, gold circle danced and twirled at the end of the
silver chain. She had danced and twirled under the smoky haze of neon lights,
laughing and flirting, making promises that were to never come true.
Shane gripped the diamond ring,
ceasing its merry spin, and flattened it to his chest. The emergency room
doctor had removed it from her finger and given it to Shane, pity gleaming in
the man’s eyes. The doctor’s fingers were heavy as they pressed the ring into
his palm; the memory of the band’s slick feel from the blood was branded into
his palm. From then on, the ring dangled from a chain around his neck, settling
in a place near his heart. A reminder of what he lost in a moment of stupidity.
The jangle of his phone drifted
into the bathroom. In the last half hour, he’d heard it go off five times.
Lifting his face to the spray of the shower, he commenced with continuing to
ignore the persistent caller.
A thrumming ache wove through
his muscles and seeped into his bones. Too many years on the rodeo circuit
riding some of the rankest broncs and his multiple tours in the Sandbox had
left behind a different kind of pain he easily remedied with a few aspirin.
Though it was getting difficult to ease the hurt, especially after a night
spent on a hardwood floor. Shane turned fifty next month, but felt all of
seventy.
Finishing his poor man’s
shower, he shut off the faucet and then stepped out of the stall. Once more the
old-fashioned telephone ring of his cell phone reached him. Toweling off, he
turned his back to the open door.
Sunday morning rays peeked
through the gaping brown, plaid curtains. Before passing away, his mother had
decorated her little haven with homey touches only a cowboy like himself would
enjoy. She had done it because she missed her husband—who passed two years
before she did—and for Shane, who was to inherit the family farm. His mother must
have believed in her heart that he’d leave this world as a bachelor, never
daring to step into that minefield of love again. In reverence to his saintly
mother, Shane hadn’t changed a thing.
He wrapped the towel around his
waist, and then staggered into his bedroom to dress.
Avoiding the bed with its
twisted sheets, he pulled on a pair of jeans and skipped his duty shirt. Today
was a dark blue, plaid shirt kind of day. Finger combing his tightly coiled
hair, he stepped into his boots and carefully picked a path down the hall. Each
step sent flares of pain up his spine. It might be time to consider taking up
Doc Drummond on his offer to make an appointment with an arthritis specialist
in Iowa City.
Shane removed the half-full
coffee pot from the warmer and slowly poured a cup. Lifting the stout mug to
his lips, he inhaled the aroma of dark roast and then sipped the strong brew.
During his travels all over the world, Shane had fallen in love with Community
coffee in Louisiana. He sniffed, reality punching him in the gut. Louisiana had
been his little trick rider’s home state; Community had been her favorite
coffee. And what she’d loved, he loved, too.
Today was going to be rough. He
had to find a way to get past this.
Rummaging through the cabinets,
he upended a box of Pop-Tarts and snatched a package. Tearing into the foil
with his teeth, he grunted as he bit through both pastries. Almost fifty and
still eating like a kid. If she could see him now, she’d probably laugh.
His phone went off like a
banshee. Damn it to hell and back! He made a crooked path to the table where
the infernal machine continued to squeal. Seven missed calls and eighteen text
messages glared at him.
“Shit.” He stabbed a blunt
finger at the speakerphone icon. “Murdoch, this better be damn important to
interrupt me on my sabbatical.”
“How damn important is it to
you that there’s a body in the river, boss?”
One
stop shop for buy links: Simon & Schuster buy links
💝
Winter Austin perpetually answers the question “were you born in the winter?” with a flat “nope.” Living in the middle of Nowheresville, Iowa, with her husband, four teenagers, and two crazy dogs, Winter is trying to juggle a job while writing deadly romantic thrillers.
Find Winter Austin at www.winteraustin.com , on Facebook www.facebook.com/author.winteraustin/, and on Twitter @WinterAustin_ Goodreads link: www.goodreads.com/author/show/6880807.Winter_Austin
Thanks for having me, ma'am. And I'm glad you loved this series as much as the previous one.
ReplyDeleteI may have even liked it more!
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