Category Archives: RJ Jacobs

Review: Somewhere in the Dark by R.J. Jacobs

Title: Somewhere in the Dark by R.J. Jacobs
Publisher: Crooked Lane Books
Genre: Contemporary, Domestic Mystery, Suspense
Length: 268 pages
Book Rating: B+

Complimentary Review Copy Provided by Publisher Through NetGalley

Summary:

Exploring lives on the brink of disaster, R. J. Jacobs returns with another compulsively readable novel of suspense for fans of B. A. Paris and Mary Kubica.

Do the mistakes of the past mark us as guilty for life?

After a childhood marred by neglect, Jessie Duval’s finally got it together. With an apartment in Nashville and a job with a catering company, she’s thriving.

But all that changes when Jessie works an event where celebrities will be in attendance–including the one person from her past she must avoid at all costs: singer Shelly James. Jessie doesn’t hate Shelly. Quite the opposite. One summer, she followed Shelly’s tour everywhere. Only, Shelly wasn’t flattered; she was terrified by Jessie’s devotion–especially after Jessie was arrested. But after a year of therapy, Jessie understands what happened. She’s not the same person anymore.

Jessie keeps her head down, but when Shelly is found dead, Jessie’s troubled past comes tumbling out and she quickly becomes a suspect in the high-profile murder. As the police close in on her, ignoring other credible leads, Jessie realizes Shelly’s murder will be pinned on her–the perfect scapegoat–unless she finds the real killer. And no one knows Shelly’s life and inner circle better than her. But she will have to go deeper into the dark–if ever she wants to find her way out.

Review:

Somewhere in the Dark by R.J. Jacobs is an intriguing mystery that is also rather touching.

Nineteen year old Jessie Duvall is finally getting her life on track. Growing up, she bounces from foster home to foster home and she endures horrendous neglect. She becomes fixated on singer Shelly James following a horrific year in one of the foster homes. This obsession eventually culminates with time in prison.  Jessie is now living in Nashville and she has a job she likes, a parole officer she fears and a warm and caring social worker. With a better understanding of her fascination with Shelly James,  Jessie is staying away from the family and considering everything in her past, she is doing well. That is until Jessie winds up back in Shelly’s orbit. And when Shelly is murdered, Jessie is Detectives Jason Marion and Williams prime suspect. Will Jessie figure out the identity of the real killer before she is arrested?

Jessie is still playing catch up due to the extreme neglect from her childhood. She tries to blend in whenever she is in public and she is quite watchful of the people around her. Jessie still struggles with naming her emotions but she is an expert at reading whatever situation she is in. So when she sees Shelly, her husband and band mate Owen and their daughter Finch, Jessie notices things are not quite right with the family.   And looking back at the time she spent following the tour, Jessie  has a better understanding of some of the things she witnessed but shrugged off at the time.

Jessie’s life does not get truly complicated until right before and after Shelly’s murder. She is terrified of getting arrested so she tries to piece together what lead her to this point. With help from a very unexpected source, Jessie begins investigatimg Shelly’s death on her own. But Detective Williams is laser focused on no other suspect and Jessie goes to extreme lengths to protect herself from being arrested for murder.

With an unusual but appealing protagonist, Somewhere in the Dark is a slow burn yet incredibly engrossing mystery. Jessie is a vividly drawn young woman who is extremely  easy to like and root for.  She continues to grow and evolve throughout the novel as she puts her fixation on the James  family into perspective. The investigation into Shelly’s murder is interesting and R.J. Jacobs this compelling mystery to a gratifying conclusion.  I highly recommend this riveting mystery to fans of the genre.

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Filed under Contest, Crooked Lane Books, Domestic Mystery, Mystery, Rated B+, Review, RJ Jacobs, Somewhere in the Dark, Suspense

Review: And Then You Were Gone by R.J. Jacobs

Title: And Then You Were Gone by R.J. Jacobs
Publisher: Crooked Lane Books
Genre: Contemporary, Mystery, Suspense
Length: 282 pages
Book Rating: B

Complimentary Review Copy Provided by Publisher Through NetGalley

Summary:

For fans of B. A. Paris and Mary Kubica comes a propulsive, twisting psychological thriller that asks, How can you save someone else if you can’t save yourself?

After years of learning how to manage her bipolar disorder, Emily Firestone finally has it under control. Even better, her life is coming together: she’s got a great job, her own place, and a boyfriend, Paolo, who adores her. So when Paolo suggests a weekend sailing trip, Emily agrees—wine, water, and the man she loves? What could be better? But when Emily wakes the morning after they set sail, the boat is still adrift…and Paolo is gone.

A strong swimmer, there’s no way Paolo drowned, but Emily is at a loss for any other explanation. Where else could he have gone? And why? As the hours and days pass by, each moment marking Paolo’s disappearance, Emily’s hard-won stability begins to slip.

But when Emily uncovers evidence suggesting Paolo was murdered, the investigation throws her mania into overdrive, even as she becomes a person of interest in her own personal tragedy. To clear her name, Emily must find the truth—but can she hold onto her own sanity in the process?

Review:

And Then You Were Gone by R.J. Jacobs is a suspenseful mystery about a psychologist whose boyfriend goes missing during a weekend getaway.

Dr. Emily Firestone overcomes her fear of water in order to enjoy a sailing weekend with her boyfriend, Paolo Fererra. After a fun day on the lake, Emily awakens to next morning to find that Paolo has vanished.  Her bipolar disorder immediately begins to spiral out of control due to her lack of sleep and extreme stress. Already convinced Paolo’s death is from foul play, Emily’s suspicions are confirmed when his lab coworker, Sandy Harrison, reaches out to her to investigate some irregularities she has uncovered.  Before long, the police are taking a second look at Emily when people connected to her begin to die. Will Emily find out the truth about what happened to Paolo before it is too late?

Emily is a well-respected child psychologist whose bipolar II disorder has been well-controlled for quite some time. She relies on a strict medication regime to keep her bipolar disorder in check  but her erratic behavior soon plunges her into a manic state. Soon after Paolo’s disappearance, she makes a series of ill-advised decisions that jeopardize her mental health and her career. Emily is not able to distinguish between fact and fantasy as she begins experiencing paranoia as she skips her medicine and gives up sleep in order to find out what happened to Paolo.

Emily is already on the edge when Sandy brings her puzzling information she has unearthed at the lab where she and Paolo are working on a vaccine for a deadly virus.  Emily’s anxiety levels begin to spike as she impatiently waits for Sandy to retrieve proof they can take to the authorities. Fully immersed in a hypo-manic state, Emily races headlong into danger as she frantically attempts to understand what happened to Paolo and why. Even more troubling is the warning she receives from her best friend that Emily is becoming more than just a person of interest in the events swirling around Paolo’s disappearance.

And Then You Were Gone is a fast-paced and compelling mystery starring an increasingly unreliable narrator. Emily’s need for answers is understandable but her refusal to take her medication becomes a bit tedious. With plenty of tension, a few red herrings and some shocking twists,  R.J. Jacobs brings this perplexing mystery to an action-packed conclusion. An excellent mystery that I greatly enjoyed and highly recommend to fans of the genre.

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Filed under And Then You Were Gone, Contemporary, Crooked Lane Books, Mystery, Rated B, Review, RJ Jacobs, Suspense