Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Publication Day Review: The Lost Angels: A Thriller by Michele Domínguez Greene


The Lost Angels: A Thriller by Michele Domínguez Greene is a direct sequel to the Hollywood Hitmen novel of last year. Like that book, this read is not really a thriller though it is a bit grittier. This read is more like an actual police procedural as well.

 

The plight of young children and teens on the streets is a nationwide problem. It is also the main storyline of The Lost Angels: A Thriller. Evie Peacock is one of those teens on the streets of Los Angeles doing almost anything to survive. As the book opens on a rainy night, she is seventeen, and very worried about her friend, Layla Waters. The same friend, Layla Waters, who had called her a couple of days earlier, and said the guy she had been living with was bad news after all. She had promised come back to Evie and the others in their small group who all look out for each other. She also wanted to show Evie something so they could figure out what to do and who to tell about it.

 

That was not to be.

 

Soon, Officer Cassidy Clarke, just back at work in the LAPD after a stress leave due to recent events, will be part of the hunt for the missing Layla. So, too will her father, Bill Clarke, who is on a better mental footing these days, thanks to the medication he is now on and other things. It would be helpful if the killer languishing in prison would stop calling for him.

 

Then there is Melinda Drake, director of the Kidz Club house, who is just about at her wits end. She runs a resource center and overnight shelter for homeless teens and runaways. Her place is a sanctuary for those living on the streets.  It is a well-known refuge and sorely needed.

 

She flags down Cassidy and Officer Sean Riley while they are on patrol. She wants to follow up on numerous phone calls she has made regarding several missing kids. She knows of at least five kids who used to be frequent guests and now have seemingly disappeared. She also knows of a very low-level pimp, Aiden Howe, who used to be around all the time, and now is not.

 

She’s called in repeatedly to report these situations. She’s talked to Captain Dykstra of the Hollywood Station, who promised somebody would come by and take a report. Nobody ever did, no matter how many times she called. So, she flagged down Cassidy and Riley to ask, again, that somebody listen and do something.

 

Using her data terminal in their patrol car, Cassidy files a report for each of the missing kids so that the investigative ball gets rolling. Cassidy isn’t about to just file the reports and move on either. Neither will her former detective father, now retired and working as a private investigator, as he never lets anything go. Both of them and others will work the cases of the missing kids while also working other cases and dealing with past and present events in various storylines.

 

While an incredibly depressing topic when one thinks about the thousands and thousands of kids living on the streets of this country, the topic is handled well in The Lost Angels: A Thriller by Michele Domínguez Greene. Plenty of action and mystery are present in this read that also concludes several over arching storylines from the first book. The resulting read is far more of a police procedural than the cozy style first book. That fact made it, for this reader, a far more entertaining and enjoyable read.

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/42vms9L

 

 

My digital ARC came from the publisher, Thomas & Mercer, through NetGalley, with no expectation of a positive review. 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026

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