Title: Craven {Cass Lehman and Detective Ed Dyson #2}
Author: Melanie Casey
Published: Pantera Press May 2014
Status: Read from August 29 to 31, 2014 — I own a copy {Courtesy the publisher}
My Thoughts:
Craven, by Melanie Casey, is the sequel to Hindsight, featuring Cass Lehman, a woman with the psychic gift of retrocognition, and South Australian police detective, Ed Dyson.
As the book opens we learn that Cass has taken the leap and left home, securing a teacher’s position at a college in Adelaide. Cass is hoping for a fresh start but during her very first lesson she is recognised by her students and almost immediately becomes a target of gossip and derision.
Ed is conspicuously absent, it seems their romance stalled in the intervening months, though we soon learn that Ed is also in Adelaide, working with a local command on a year long secondment, and when Cass’s car is painted in blood with ‘Freak’ scrawled across the windshield he is the first person she calls. Thrown together as Cass’s stalker grows more violent, Cass is inevitably drawn into Ed’s latest case – a search for a serial killer.
Though I still really like concept of this series I was disappointed by the execution of this novel. I had issues with the uneven pacing and with what I felt were several underdeveloped elements in the plot. There was too much focus on the mundane details of Ed’s often circular investigation, and the obnoxiousness of his new partner. The identification of the stalker taunting Cass seemed come from nowhere since he barely rated a mention in the story.
The killer did have an interesting story and his motivations were suitably dark and twisted. There were moments of high tension, though much of the real action is crammed into the last few chapters when Cass is once again at the mercy of an insane murderer.
Despite the flaws in Craven I am still intrigued by the potential of this series and I hope Casey regains her footing in the third installment.
Craven is available to purchase from
Pantera Press I I Booktopia I Bookworld I via Booko
and all good bookstores.
Some books scare me just because of the covers? This is one of those books!
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I really should read more Australian fiction. Particularly crime / mystery / thrillers!
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