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Blood Moon

Audiobook
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0 of 2 copies available
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In this sexy thriller from #1 New York Times bestselling author Sandra Brown, an unruly detective and an ambitious TV show producer work against the clock to prevent another young woman from disappearing before the next blood moon—while trying to resist the attraction between them.
Detective John Bowie is one misstep away from being fired from the Auclair Police Department in coastal Louisiana. Recently divorced and slightly heavy-handed with his liquor, Bowie does all that he can to cope with the actions taken (or not taken) during the investigation of Crissy Mellin, a teenage girl who disappeared more than three years prior. But now, Crisis Point, a long-running true crime television series, is soon to air an episode documenting the unsolved Mellin case. Bowie has been instructed by his unscrupulous boss to keep to his grievances and criticisms over the mishandling of the investigation to himself.

Beth Collins, a senior producer on Crisis Point, knows what classifies as a great story and when there's something more to be told. After working on the show for seven years, Collins is convinced that Crissy Mellin's disappearance was not an isolated incident. A string of disappearances of teenage girls in nearby areas have only one thing in common: They took place on the night of a blood moon. In a last-ditch effort to find out the truth, Beth enlists Detective Bowie to help her figure out what happened to Crissy and find the true culprit before he acts on the next blood moon—in four days' time.
With their jobs and their lives at risk, Bowie and Collins band together to identify and capture a perpetrator, while fighting an irresistible spark between them that threatens to upend everything.
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    • Library Journal

      October 1, 2024

      Detective John Bowie is stymied in the case of a missing girl. Beth Collins, a senior producer on the true-crime show Crisis Point, might have a lead that lands her on the trail of the killer and requires her to team up with John to stop another murder. Award-winning Brown, who has written 76 bestsellers, gets a 250K-copy first printing. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      January 1, 2025
      Sandra Brown's readers know what she's up to. Her seventy-plus novels, mostly romance and suspense, often contain sly parodies of pop genres. Her current offering begins with a familiar scene: a lawman enters a saloon, orders a drink, and pays no mind to the jeers of the boozed-up yahoos nearby. Brown invites the reader to grin knowingly, only for the scene to turn wonky. The story unfolds from there: a female producer of a true-crime TV show visits Auclair, Louisiana, for a story on unsolved cases of disappearing teenage girls. She finds herself sharing notes with a local cop scarred by betrayal--his boss once wanted a case wrapped quickly: he obeyed, even though he knew it betrayed the victims. Why? He wanted in on the promotion track and its promised a pay increase. Such shots of realism keep the novel anchored in the everyday, as do bursts of nice writing and a couple of steamy sex scenes. The story reminds us what a fine writer Brown is.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2025
      A TV producer and a detective try to stop a strange pattern of young women disappearing. In "Auclair, Loooziana," disillusioned detective John Bowie reluctantly meets in a bar with Beth Collins, producer for the true crime showCrisis Point. She needs to interview him about the disastrous case of the missing Crissy Mellin, but he refuses. The teenager disappeared three years ago on the night of a blood moon and hasn't been found, but a suspect hanged himself in jail after signing a confession. Case closed, says John's boss. But John is convinced that their prisoner could not have been guilty, and he's deeply upset at his failure. "The Mellin case messed up your life," Beth tells him. She persuades John that Crissy's disappearance is the latest of a series that happen on the night of a blood moon, the colloquial term for a total lunar eclipse. "It's going to happen again," she predicts. And wouldn't you know, another blood moon is coming in four days.Tick, tick, tick. Beth's boss atCrisis Point insists on airing an update on the case, but Beth knows the show is going to get it wrong, and its reputation will be ruined. Meanwhile, there's an electric sexual tension between Beth and John that the author toys with nicely--do they, or don't they? The answer plays out in detail more than once. The characters are fun if easy to pigeonhole: the detective angry at his failure, the honest (and beautiful) outsider eager to do her job but susceptible to love, the hero's corrupt (to say the least) boss, and the ogre who carries out said boss's dirtiest deeds. Even John's dog, Mutt, plays a small but vital role. When John found him, he'd been "a flea-bitten hide wrapped around a skeleton that whimpered." Little plot devices are easy to spot, like the phone that rings at a crucial moment, or the handgun that John places in Beth's hand for her protection. Does Chekhov's guideline apply here? The romantic angle leavens the dark theme, and readers will have plenty of incentives to turn the pages. A satisfying crime novel with a side order of romance.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Small-town Louisiana detective John Bowie is convinced that a young woman's murder has been attributed to the wrong man. A maverick on the verge of losing his job, he persuades Beth Collins, a true-crime TV producer, to investigate whether the girl's disappearance might be connected to others. Narrator Kyf Brewer does well in portraying Bowie's gritty, uncompromising demeanor, but his mildly Southern accents don't sound like Louisiana. In lengthy dialogues, it's not always clear which character is speaking. Happily, Brewer's well-timed pacing carries the story as the pair consider whether the girls' departures are connected with the appearance of blood moons. Added interest is provided by the steamy attraction between Bowie and Beth. N.M.C. © AudioFile 2025, Portland, Maine

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