Pros: Great characters, good story and mix of comic and
serious
Cons: Some obnoxious
Christian characters
The Bottom Line:
Debut that mixes
The serious and funny
Enjoyable read
You'll Swiftly Fall for this Debut
I'm always picking up new series that sound like fun, fully
intending to read them. And there they
sit until I get a chance to read them. I
finally got that chance with Swift Justice, and I wish I had read it sooner.
Charlotte "Charlie" Swift's PI business has been
slowly growing over the years, and she thinks she might finally be getting
ahead. Then her world changes
when Georgia "Gigi" Goldman walks in the door. Gigi is the wife of Charlie's silent business
partner, a man who has just divorced her and left her with few assets beside
Swift Investigations. And Gigi has no
interest in being a silent partner but wants to be Charlie's real partner in
the business.
While Charlie tries everything she can think of to get Gigi
to quit, she also takes on a new client.
Melissa Lloyd has recently had a baby dumped on her doorstep - a baby
left by the daughter she gave up for adoption seventeen years before. Melissa wants her daughter tracked down so
she can take back the baby fast. But
with nothing to go on, can Charlie do it?
And will she drive Gigi away?
This book had a very mixed tone, but it worked. The main plot was fairly serious and at times
emotional and tragic. And yet the sub-plot
involving Gigi was always funny. I found
myself laughing at a few of her escapades.
Mind you, this was from a mix of her inexperience and what happened to
her.
I liked both of the main characters. In their own ways, Charlie and Gigi are smart
and resourceful women. They already feel
real to me, and I'm looking forward to spending more time with them in the very
near future.
The rest of the cast was equally real to me. It made the stakes in the mystery higher
because I really did care about the outcome.
The mystery was strong with some twists that kept me
guessing until the end. I managed to be
surprised by the ending.
My only real problem with the book was a very anti-religious
bent. Some of the characters are very
obnoxious and hypocritical about their overly religious ways. Unfortunately, there are people like that in
the world. I just wish they had been
better balanced out by more than Charlie's neighbor who doesn't play a huge
part in the story overall. I'm hopeful
this won't be a theme in the series but a result of this particular
mystery. And again, I can't pick apart
these characters because unfortunately, there are really people like them in
the world.
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