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Lyn Squire

Why I liked HOPE TO DIE

Hope to Die by Cara Hunter ranks as one of the finest police procedurals in recent years.  The police arrive at a modest country house to find a dead body, or at least a torso and limbs, the man’s head having been blasted off by a shotgun fired at close range. The seventy-year-old householder claims he killed the victim, an intruder, in self-defense.



His wife, who says she remained in bed when he got up to investigate a noise downstairs, confirms his account.  A straightforward home intrusion, then, that sadly ended with a fatality.  So thinks DI Adam Fawley of the Thames Valley Police until he and his colleagues spot some oddities and unexplained gaps in the pair’s story.  This premise, with its hint of an underlying mystery, is enough to snag the reader’s interest, but after that, the narrative explodes as the police dig deeper into the extraordinary events leading to the shooting.  At the heart of the story is a woman incarcerated for fifteen years for a murder she vehemently denies committing.  The efforts of the police to peel back layer after layer of the deceit and deception lying behind her conviction and the shooting make Hope to Die a five-star winner.



Star Rating: 5 out of 5

Available on Amazon


Published by William Morrow

June 11, 2024







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