The stay
at the resort known as “Trophy Cay” should be a fun time for Jessie Madison and
her roommate, Shelly. It better be as it took four hours on the high-speed
ferry from Nassau. For Jessie, who is 23 and has worked as a dive instructor in
the Bahamas the last three months, it is one final fling before she goes back
to the mainland and deals with the wreckage of her life as the first book in a
new series, Perilous Waters: A Jessie Madison Thriller, by Terry
Shames begins.
Soon
Jessie and Shelly run into Jean “Johnny” Durand, a local boat captain, and his
friend, Nick Garnier. They spend the rest of the day hanging out together.
While Jessie sees that Johnny and Nick clearly have something going on, even
possible criminal activity, she continues to spend time with them. Johnny and
Jessie have a bit of a flirting thing going on and soon wind up on the catamaran
that Johnny is piloting for wealthy clients. After some strangeness on the dock
as they are being watched, Johnny, pilots the boat out of the marina at the
resort and takes it to a nearby isolated cove.
What
should have been a quiet intimate night is soon interrupted by armed gunmen.
While Jessie and Johnny do their best to resist, they are outmanned, and
outgunned. Things quickly go from bad to worse and soon Jessie is in a
desperate attempt to stay alive.
What
follows is a read that is far different from the very good Samuel
Craddock Mystery Series by the author. So different, in fact, if not
for her name on the book, I would have thought it was written by somebody else.
I grant that as a 62-year-old
male, who has seen a thing or three, I am most likely not be the right audience
for this book.
The 23-year-old
heroine, Jessie, is incredibly ingenious and can create almost anything from
various items at hand. She has incredible stamina and persistence. She has a
lot of personal baggage which is gradually revealed over the course of this first
book in the series. She’s personally complicated and can survive anything and
everything.
What she
does not have is a shred of common sense. She continues to put herself over and
over again into situations that even at 23, she should know better. Even if the
reader accepts that, her refusal to contact law enforcement of any type, after
the first of her near-death experiences, and tell them what happened to her is
very problematic. That refusal to contact law enforcement is complete unbelievable
as she was, at one time, as noted on the book description, enrolled in the FBI
training program. In fact, she does not tell anyone. Instead, she recovers from
her first near death experience, and then starts her own investigation. That
fact alone made it very hard for this reader to stay with the book.
What
clearly does work is the author’s love of the islands and sailing. According to
the bio, the author has considerable experience on the water and it shows. The
settings are vivid and are done well.
It is
several other elements, including the heroine refusing to do basic common-sense
things for no good reason, that this reader had issue with through the entire
book.
Amazon
Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4cbbGcI
My
reading copy from the publisher, Severn House, as an ARC by way of NetGalley.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2024
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