I dont often give 4 stars. This writing is good. The story takes a while to hook you in but it doesn't matter because she writes the characters so richly you dont mind not knowing for a while what's going on... Roxane's a mess but rather than being a cliche she has dimension to her and you end up liking her even though you wouldn't necessarily want to be her friend. Havent enjoyed characters as much since the Harry Bosch series.
I can often pick the twist ending of these things but I didn't this time which was refreshing (if not a blow to my own ego). Bring on the next one.


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The Last Place You Look Audio CD – CD, 13 June 2017
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Kristen Lepionka
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Kristen Lepionka
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Product details
- Publisher : Blackstone Audio, Inc.; Unabridged AUDIO edition (13 June 2017)
- Language: : English
- ISBN-10 : 153843041X
- ISBN-13 : 978-1538430415
- Dimensions : 13.72 x 2.29 x 13.97 cm
- Customer Reviews:
Product description
Review
''Lepionka reboots the thriller genre with her troubled hero, Roxane Weary, a private eye with little concern for her own safety (or the gender of her shifting sexual partners.) The Last Place You Look riffs off Raymond Chandler and Mickey Spillane but finds a way to make detective fiction relevant again, in 2017. I have never read a more confident debut.'' -- James Renner, author of True Crime Addict and The Man From Primrose Lane
''In The Last Place You Look, a talented new voice in crime fiction gives us the seedier side of a Midwestern community -- and a character worth following anywhere she trespasses. A wonderful debut.'' --Lori Rader-Day, Mary Higgins Clark Award and Anthony Award-winning author of The Black Hour and Little Pretty Things
''Roxane is a wonderfully complex character...This is a remarkably accomplished debut mystery, with sensitive character development and a heart-stopping denouement. Let's hope there are more Roxane Weary novels on the way.'' --Booklist (starred review)
''Introducing a fascinating protagonist who combats her emotional demons with the aid of sugar, booze, and sex, this suspenseful, original, and confident debut will please fans of the hardboiled PI genre.'' --Library Journal (starred review)
''Lepionka's debut confidently portrays complex characters with multiple, sometimes contradictory, motivations and offers an unusually naturalistic perspective on sexual identity.'' --Kirkus Reviews
''Action-packed...Lepionka has created an appealing, relatable lead.'' --PW
''Utterly superb -- can't remember when I last read such an expertly written and perfectly constructed book that gave me so much pure reading pleasure.'' --Sophie Hannah, author of Closed Casket and The Monogram Murders
''The Last Place You Look is a sharp, timely, and assured debut. Lepionka's got a real knack for character. Her protagonist, private eye Roxane Weary, manages to honor her literary predecessors while still crackling with originality and life.'' --Chris Holm, Anthony Award-Winning author of The Killing Kind and Red Right Hand
''Just when you think the PI novel is dead, Kristen Lepionka brings it roaring back to life. Roxane Weary is a richly drawn protagonist who proves that 'hardboiled' and 'feminine' aren't mutually exclusive. This book is so good it makes me jealous.'' --Rob Hart, author of New Yorked and City of Rose, and associate publisher at Mysterious Press
''The Last Place You Look is a beautifully written mystery, one I devoured in a single sitting, late into the night. I'll now follow detective Roxane Weary anywhere: into her hopes and fears, into her past, and -- especially -- into danger. An extraordinary debut novel.'' --Christopher Coake, author of You Came Back
''The P.I. at the heart of The Last Place You Look may be troubled and still green, but Kristen Lepionka's debut mystery is as confident and deft as they come. A moving, arresting novel.'' --Michael Kardos, author of Before He Finds Her
''In her daring debut, Kristen Lepionka blends traditional mystery with heart-stopping thriller elements to create something plenty original. The down-on-her-luck PI Roxane Weary battles her emotional demons to track down a human one, stumbling into plenty of trouble along the way. But she overcomes doubt in all its ugly forms, succeeding where others have failed. Lepionka exceeds expectations, as well, in this ambitious novel. With its memorable characters and surprising twists, The Last Place You Look will stay with readers long after they turn the last page.'' --Erica Wright, author of The Granite Moth and The Red Chameleon
''In The Last Place You Look, a talented new voice in crime fiction gives us the seedier side of a Midwestern community -- and a character worth following anywhere she trespasses. A wonderful debut.'' --Lori Rader-Day, Mary Higgins Clark Award and Anthony Award-winning author of The Black Hour and Little Pretty Things
''Roxane is a wonderfully complex character...This is a remarkably accomplished debut mystery, with sensitive character development and a heart-stopping denouement. Let's hope there are more Roxane Weary novels on the way.'' --Booklist (starred review)
''Introducing a fascinating protagonist who combats her emotional demons with the aid of sugar, booze, and sex, this suspenseful, original, and confident debut will please fans of the hardboiled PI genre.'' --Library Journal (starred review)
''Lepionka's debut confidently portrays complex characters with multiple, sometimes contradictory, motivations and offers an unusually naturalistic perspective on sexual identity.'' --Kirkus Reviews
''Action-packed...Lepionka has created an appealing, relatable lead.'' --PW
''Utterly superb -- can't remember when I last read such an expertly written and perfectly constructed book that gave me so much pure reading pleasure.'' --Sophie Hannah, author of Closed Casket and The Monogram Murders
''The Last Place You Look is a sharp, timely, and assured debut. Lepionka's got a real knack for character. Her protagonist, private eye Roxane Weary, manages to honor her literary predecessors while still crackling with originality and life.'' --Chris Holm, Anthony Award-Winning author of The Killing Kind and Red Right Hand
''Just when you think the PI novel is dead, Kristen Lepionka brings it roaring back to life. Roxane Weary is a richly drawn protagonist who proves that 'hardboiled' and 'feminine' aren't mutually exclusive. This book is so good it makes me jealous.'' --Rob Hart, author of New Yorked and City of Rose, and associate publisher at Mysterious Press
''The Last Place You Look is a beautifully written mystery, one I devoured in a single sitting, late into the night. I'll now follow detective Roxane Weary anywhere: into her hopes and fears, into her past, and -- especially -- into danger. An extraordinary debut novel.'' --Christopher Coake, author of You Came Back
''The P.I. at the heart of The Last Place You Look may be troubled and still green, but Kristen Lepionka's debut mystery is as confident and deft as they come. A moving, arresting novel.'' --Michael Kardos, author of Before He Finds Her
''In her daring debut, Kristen Lepionka blends traditional mystery with heart-stopping thriller elements to create something plenty original. The down-on-her-luck PI Roxane Weary battles her emotional demons to track down a human one, stumbling into plenty of trouble along the way. But she overcomes doubt in all its ugly forms, succeeding where others have failed. Lepionka exceeds expectations, as well, in this ambitious novel. With its memorable characters and surprising twists, The Last Place You Look will stay with readers long after they turn the last page.'' --Erica Wright, author of The Granite Moth and The Red Chameleon
About the Author
Kristen Lepionka grew up mostly in her local public library, where she could be found with a big stack of adult mysteries before she was out of middle school. In the name of writing research, she has gone on multiple police ride-alongs, taken a lock-picking class, trespassed through an abandoned granary, and hiked inside an Icelandic volcano. Her writing has been selected for McSweeney's ''Internet Tendency,'' Grift, and Black Elephant. She is also the editor of Betty Fedora, a semiannual journal that publishes feminist crime fiction.
Audiobook Narrator Bio: Allyson Ryan is a voice actress who can be heard in commercials, promos, animation, and audiobooks. She received an AudioFile Earphones Award for her narration of Kaya McLaren's On the Divinity of Second Chances. She also has extensive experience on stage and television and has appeared as ''Mom'' in several television commercials. Advertising Age nominated her for a Bobby Award in the best actress category for her work as the Duracell mom.
Audiobook Narrator Bio: Allyson Ryan is a voice actress who can be heard in commercials, promos, animation, and audiobooks. She received an AudioFile Earphones Award for her narration of Kaya McLaren's On the Divinity of Second Chances. She also has extensive experience on stage and television and has appeared as ''Mom'' in several television commercials. Advertising Age nominated her for a Bobby Award in the best actress category for her work as the Duracell mom.
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4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5 out of 5
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Reviewed in Australia on 15 June 2019
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3.0 out of 5 stars
A good first book in a series with a great protagonist and I look forward to more
Reviewed in Australia on 17 August 2017
Goodreads bills this as Roxane Weary #1, so it’s already a good sign that this debut novel by Kirsten Lepionka will be the first of many. Or at least several. It’s also ideal to start a new series at the beginning…. something I’ve occasionally not done and my enjoyment of subsequent books has suffered as a result.
I must admit initially I assumed there’d been other books in this series as we meet investigator Roxane at a point when she’s struggling. There are a few comments about her drinking and her father’s death so I wondered what I’d missed. However… Lepionka does a great job at eking out Roxane’s backstory – particularly her family history and her complicated relationship with her cop-father, Frank…. who was killed on the job nine months before this book kicks off.
Roxane’s a great character. Indeed, Lepionka’s shied away from over-achievers in this book (and series so far). Roxane and her two brothers all seem to be struggling a little though all in their mid-late thirties. I suspect we’ll learn more about their relationship with their father (and mother) as the series progresses but we meet her family a few times in this book (she’s particularly close to her brother Andrew) and get a peek at the type of man who raised them. Indeed it seems to have been something that shaped Roxane and she’s struggling with the fact her father viewed her as a disappointment.
We learn early that Roxane’s had both male and female love interests and meet her long-term on-again / off-again girlfriend in this first novel. There is – however – a bit of an a-ha moment on that front.
The plot itself is interesting and, although not-quite-addictive, I read it in a sitting. Roxane’s cynical about Brad Stockton’s innocence and his sister’s assertion that Sarah Cook is alive (and is somehow implicated in her parents’ murders). I expected the book to be more about the events around Sarah’s disappearance and her parents’ murders, but that wasn’t really the case. Rather, Roxane goes off on a tangent after discovering other young women (similar to Sarah) have disappeared.
She ends up with no shortage of suspects – including Brad who’s on death row and seems to have his secrets – but angers the local police force who seem irrationally angry about her investigation.
I’m not sure I found the actual conclusion entirely feasible – in terms of events of 15yrs earlier and Sarah’s disappearance as that part of the plot ultimately felt a little underdone. I was kept guessing, however, until Roxane herself worked it all out.
This is a great debut novel and I look forward to more in the series.
3.5 stars
I must admit initially I assumed there’d been other books in this series as we meet investigator Roxane at a point when she’s struggling. There are a few comments about her drinking and her father’s death so I wondered what I’d missed. However… Lepionka does a great job at eking out Roxane’s backstory – particularly her family history and her complicated relationship with her cop-father, Frank…. who was killed on the job nine months before this book kicks off.
Roxane’s a great character. Indeed, Lepionka’s shied away from over-achievers in this book (and series so far). Roxane and her two brothers all seem to be struggling a little though all in their mid-late thirties. I suspect we’ll learn more about their relationship with their father (and mother) as the series progresses but we meet her family a few times in this book (she’s particularly close to her brother Andrew) and get a peek at the type of man who raised them. Indeed it seems to have been something that shaped Roxane and she’s struggling with the fact her father viewed her as a disappointment.
We learn early that Roxane’s had both male and female love interests and meet her long-term on-again / off-again girlfriend in this first novel. There is – however – a bit of an a-ha moment on that front.
The plot itself is interesting and, although not-quite-addictive, I read it in a sitting. Roxane’s cynical about Brad Stockton’s innocence and his sister’s assertion that Sarah Cook is alive (and is somehow implicated in her parents’ murders). I expected the book to be more about the events around Sarah’s disappearance and her parents’ murders, but that wasn’t really the case. Rather, Roxane goes off on a tangent after discovering other young women (similar to Sarah) have disappeared.
She ends up with no shortage of suspects – including Brad who’s on death row and seems to have his secrets – but angers the local police force who seem irrationally angry about her investigation.
I’m not sure I found the actual conclusion entirely feasible – in terms of events of 15yrs earlier and Sarah’s disappearance as that part of the plot ultimately felt a little underdone. I was kept guessing, however, until Roxane herself worked it all out.
This is a great debut novel and I look forward to more in the series.
3.5 stars
Reviewed in Australia on 13 July 2017
Actual rating 4.5*
What happened to Sarah Cook? I found I was asking myself a lot as I read this debut novel. How can a young woman just vanish on the day her parents are brutally murdered?? Did her boyfriend murder the three of them? Did she do it? Did she run away? So many questions!!!
I really liked our main character Roxane (one “n” not two). She’s a head strong woman with two very different brothers – that’s possibly why I identified with her as I too have two brothers both different in personality. I loved the banter and disagreements she had with her brothers and the differing ways they handle the matriarch of their close knit family.
I hope to see more from Kristen Lepionka and Roxane! Its hard to believe this is the author’s first novel. The writing really drew me into the investigation. I’m not the biggest fan of crime thrillers set in the States but the author’s writing style is adding weight to the argument that I need to change my opinions!! As for suspects, I went up so many blind alleys and hit dead ends as Roxane dug more and more into the goings-on in Belmont – totally blindsided!!
The community in which Roxane finds herself has a proper small town feel – it’s a intimate community where the police seem to know everything that is going on. This is one thing that hinders Roxane in her investigation.
This is a cracking debut and I highly recommend you get yourself a copy if you like your crime fiction with bags of suspense to keep you guessing. I can see why Val McDermid has selected this novel for her New Blood: Class of 2017 showcase at this year’s Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival
Many thanks to Lauren Nicoll of Faber and Faber for my copy of The Last Place You Look.
What happened to Sarah Cook? I found I was asking myself a lot as I read this debut novel. How can a young woman just vanish on the day her parents are brutally murdered?? Did her boyfriend murder the three of them? Did she do it? Did she run away? So many questions!!!
I really liked our main character Roxane (one “n” not two). She’s a head strong woman with two very different brothers – that’s possibly why I identified with her as I too have two brothers both different in personality. I loved the banter and disagreements she had with her brothers and the differing ways they handle the matriarch of their close knit family.
I hope to see more from Kristen Lepionka and Roxane! Its hard to believe this is the author’s first novel. The writing really drew me into the investigation. I’m not the biggest fan of crime thrillers set in the States but the author’s writing style is adding weight to the argument that I need to change my opinions!! As for suspects, I went up so many blind alleys and hit dead ends as Roxane dug more and more into the goings-on in Belmont – totally blindsided!!
The community in which Roxane finds herself has a proper small town feel – it’s a intimate community where the police seem to know everything that is going on. This is one thing that hinders Roxane in her investigation.
This is a cracking debut and I highly recommend you get yourself a copy if you like your crime fiction with bags of suspense to keep you guessing. I can see why Val McDermid has selected this novel for her New Blood: Class of 2017 showcase at this year’s Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival
Many thanks to Lauren Nicoll of Faber and Faber for my copy of The Last Place You Look.
Top reviews from other countries

Read and Reviewed
4.0 out of 5 stars
A cracking and highly original hard boiled debut thriller featuring PI Roxane Weary! Fast paced with plenty of surprises!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 23 July 2017Verified Purchase
Debut US author Kristen Lepionka introduces firebrand private investigator Roxane Weary and puts her own spin on the hard boiled thriller in this impressive novel. Life isn’t treating thirty-four-year-old PI Roxane Weary too well when she meets potential client, Sarah Cook. Having self-medicated on quality whiskey in the nine-months since her father, career cop Frank Weary, was shot in the line of duty she hasn’t actually done much investigating. Pinballing back and forth between casual sex with Frank’s former detective partner, Tom Heitker, and flirting with now married high-school love, Catherine Walsh, she is something of a loose cannon! Complete with a dysfunctional family she has spent her whole life in Columbus, Ohio and is very familiar with the mindset of those that live in the far-flung suburb of Belmont. Whilst Roxane isn’t keen to work, she needs the money and her oldest brother sends mid-thirties and seemingly level headed Danielle Stockton her way. Well, she appears level headed until she specifies her requirement; locating “the girl who can get my brother off death row”.. And with an execution date set for just over two months time, Roxane is up against a ticking time bomb. It certainly seems like an insurmountable task but as Sarah Cook hands Roxane a hefty cheque she has every incentive to get started.
Fifteen-years earlier black Bradford Stockton was placed on death row charged with stabbing Garrett and Elaine Cook, the parents of his younger, white girlfriend, seventeen-year-old Sarah. On that night Sarah also disappeared and has since been presumed dead. The case was closed in record time and appeared as open and shut as they come, with the bloodied weapon found in Brad’s car. His refusal to help himself and speculate that perhaps there was another side to the story didn’t help his cause and he has resolutely refused to contemplate Sarah’s involvement. However, a chance sighting of Sarah at an Ohio gas station sees Danielle hire Roxane to track her down. Glimpsed from across the road, in partial darkness and low on specific detail the odds don’t seem favourable. On the basis of the facts presented, Roxane concludes that Brad is more probably guilty and that his sister is delusional! Just where does Roxane go from here given the paucity of details and that Danielle’s companion on that night, Brad’s friend Kenny Brayfield wasn’t convinced by the fleeting glance?
Ever resourceful and undeterred, Roxane tracks down the private investigator who assisted on Brad’s trial, Peter Novotny, a man close to eighty who remembers Frank in his heyday and clarifies the specifics of the prosecution. Brad’s failure to offer an alibi, explain how the murder weapon found its way into his car and the absence of Sarah made for the very definition of reasonable doubt. As a licensed private investigator Roxane is allowed entry to the Chillicothe Correctional Institution, but Brad is loathe to play ball and answer the same questions that have plagued him and the fifteen-years that he has languished inside have made him cynical and left a slightly menacing air. Given his initial lack of cooperation and subsequent disclosure about his teenage misdemeanours along the lines of vandalism and his best friend, Kenny, being the regular supplier of weed in Belmont, he does’t appear anyone's idea of a paragon of virtue. As Roxane tracks down thee remaining Cook family relatives, asks around about the missing Sarah and is harassed by a silent and unknown heavy breather repeatedly phoning, she comes up against a brick wall fast, but the mysterious phone calls are enough to believe she has unsettled someone.. The Belmont cops are also keeping a close watch and inordinately concerned with her loitering in the area.
As any decent private investigator worth their fee knows, a different approach to a problem can pay dividends and Roxane takes an alternative angle, specifically by looking into the stabbing deaths in Franklin County and hoping to establish a pattern of similar crimes. Her initial probing reveals that her father was assigned to the remarkably similar case of high school dropout and young mum, Mallory Evans, which still remains unresolved. Tracking down Mallory’s husband and daughter she compares the overlap and similarities… and it isn’t just Mallory that seems to have gone missing and all within the small suburb of Belmont. As a location, Belmont smacks of small town suburban America where there are very few notable events and is clearly divided by an ‘invisible line’ which separates the poorer east side from the more affluent, and whiter, west side where the opportunities lie. Whilst Roxane does benefit from some truly fortuitous good luck in her endeavours, Lepionka also introduces a barrage of twists which offer potential for exploration and unexpected detours.
However tightly plotted and twisty this case proves, it is some outstanding characterisation that marks this debut out as something mighty special. Smart-mouthed and driven, Roxane Weary is the narrator and addresses her audience throughout in an engaging conversational style. Underneath the spiky and witty exterior, she is hugely self-doubting and in fact rather vulnerable. Roxane is the epitome of a self-deprecating modern female struggling to cope with keeping her life on the straight and narrow. However, it is not just Roxane who magnetises, every one of the supporting cast are pinned down and leave a strong impression, from rich boy and would be gangster, Kenny Brayfield to confused teenager, Shelby Evans.
In the final third of this novel, when Roxane is stymied by the Belmont police after numerous run-ins and eventually arrested for criminal trespass, the pace does seem to abate with things becoming a tad repetitive and the plot takes a pause for breath. All credit to Lepionka however, as she leads her readers a merry dance into the denouement, placing one alternative scenario clearly in the frame only to then unleash a totally unexpected conclusion. With one-n as opposed to two, edgy, nosy and impatient Roxane Weary is a modern day heroine to applaud and I look forward immensely to seeing her in action once again!
Review written by Rachel Hall (@hallrachel)
Fifteen-years earlier black Bradford Stockton was placed on death row charged with stabbing Garrett and Elaine Cook, the parents of his younger, white girlfriend, seventeen-year-old Sarah. On that night Sarah also disappeared and has since been presumed dead. The case was closed in record time and appeared as open and shut as they come, with the bloodied weapon found in Brad’s car. His refusal to help himself and speculate that perhaps there was another side to the story didn’t help his cause and he has resolutely refused to contemplate Sarah’s involvement. However, a chance sighting of Sarah at an Ohio gas station sees Danielle hire Roxane to track her down. Glimpsed from across the road, in partial darkness and low on specific detail the odds don’t seem favourable. On the basis of the facts presented, Roxane concludes that Brad is more probably guilty and that his sister is delusional! Just where does Roxane go from here given the paucity of details and that Danielle’s companion on that night, Brad’s friend Kenny Brayfield wasn’t convinced by the fleeting glance?
Ever resourceful and undeterred, Roxane tracks down the private investigator who assisted on Brad’s trial, Peter Novotny, a man close to eighty who remembers Frank in his heyday and clarifies the specifics of the prosecution. Brad’s failure to offer an alibi, explain how the murder weapon found its way into his car and the absence of Sarah made for the very definition of reasonable doubt. As a licensed private investigator Roxane is allowed entry to the Chillicothe Correctional Institution, but Brad is loathe to play ball and answer the same questions that have plagued him and the fifteen-years that he has languished inside have made him cynical and left a slightly menacing air. Given his initial lack of cooperation and subsequent disclosure about his teenage misdemeanours along the lines of vandalism and his best friend, Kenny, being the regular supplier of weed in Belmont, he does’t appear anyone's idea of a paragon of virtue. As Roxane tracks down thee remaining Cook family relatives, asks around about the missing Sarah and is harassed by a silent and unknown heavy breather repeatedly phoning, she comes up against a brick wall fast, but the mysterious phone calls are enough to believe she has unsettled someone.. The Belmont cops are also keeping a close watch and inordinately concerned with her loitering in the area.
As any decent private investigator worth their fee knows, a different approach to a problem can pay dividends and Roxane takes an alternative angle, specifically by looking into the stabbing deaths in Franklin County and hoping to establish a pattern of similar crimes. Her initial probing reveals that her father was assigned to the remarkably similar case of high school dropout and young mum, Mallory Evans, which still remains unresolved. Tracking down Mallory’s husband and daughter she compares the overlap and similarities… and it isn’t just Mallory that seems to have gone missing and all within the small suburb of Belmont. As a location, Belmont smacks of small town suburban America where there are very few notable events and is clearly divided by an ‘invisible line’ which separates the poorer east side from the more affluent, and whiter, west side where the opportunities lie. Whilst Roxane does benefit from some truly fortuitous good luck in her endeavours, Lepionka also introduces a barrage of twists which offer potential for exploration and unexpected detours.
However tightly plotted and twisty this case proves, it is some outstanding characterisation that marks this debut out as something mighty special. Smart-mouthed and driven, Roxane Weary is the narrator and addresses her audience throughout in an engaging conversational style. Underneath the spiky and witty exterior, she is hugely self-doubting and in fact rather vulnerable. Roxane is the epitome of a self-deprecating modern female struggling to cope with keeping her life on the straight and narrow. However, it is not just Roxane who magnetises, every one of the supporting cast are pinned down and leave a strong impression, from rich boy and would be gangster, Kenny Brayfield to confused teenager, Shelby Evans.
In the final third of this novel, when Roxane is stymied by the Belmont police after numerous run-ins and eventually arrested for criminal trespass, the pace does seem to abate with things becoming a tad repetitive and the plot takes a pause for breath. All credit to Lepionka however, as she leads her readers a merry dance into the denouement, placing one alternative scenario clearly in the frame only to then unleash a totally unexpected conclusion. With one-n as opposed to two, edgy, nosy and impatient Roxane Weary is a modern day heroine to applaud and I look forward immensely to seeing her in action once again!
Review written by Rachel Hall (@hallrachel)
2 people found this helpful
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Malcolm R
4.0 out of 5 stars
Different but strangely old fashioned
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 21 March 2020Verified Purchase
Roxane has more problems than you can shake a stick at, grieving for her father, alcoholism, bisexuality and an old car that never breaks down - a diesel in USA! The detection is the old fashioned bit, being very Spenser like - poking around with a spoon and giving everything a good stir - and in the end being lucky. Her personal, family and social life occupy most of the story but it is so much part of the enjoyment that it does not detract from it. Looking forward to the next one.
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Lolly
5.0 out of 5 stars
Not much to say' except.....
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 12 August 2017Verified Purchase
When is the next Roxane book gona be available????
Please Ms Lepionka do not leave us Roxane fans hanging for too long.....
I know I can use the term "us Roxane fans"......because there will be thousands of us clamboring for the next adventure....
An outstanding debut novel....I read it straight through.....could not put it down....Roxane Weary is an amazing protaganist and I almost feel like I know her in real life.......I do know I want to be her......PLEASE hurry and release her next book as I am already getting withdrawal symtoms.....
An amazing....twisting....funny ....breathtaking....suprising novel from an extremly talented author
Lolly
Please Ms Lepionka do not leave us Roxane fans hanging for too long.....
I know I can use the term "us Roxane fans"......because there will be thousands of us clamboring for the next adventure....
An outstanding debut novel....I read it straight through.....could not put it down....Roxane Weary is an amazing protaganist and I almost feel like I know her in real life.......I do know I want to be her......PLEASE hurry and release her next book as I am already getting withdrawal symtoms.....
An amazing....twisting....funny ....breathtaking....suprising novel from an extremly talented author
Lolly
One person found this helpful
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Harriet Devine
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great story
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 19 June 2018Verified Purchase
This excellent novel combines the best of the traditional PI genre with a very contemporary heroine. Roxane is bisexual - she drinks too much whiskey and has issues with her family. She makes mistakes but her instincts are sound and she ends up saving the day. Highly recommended.

mrs sarah j jones
4.0 out of 5 stars
Gripping
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 15 January 2019Verified Purchase
This was a well written story. The only thing I didn’t enjoy was the fact there just wasn’t enough detail on the characters to try and guess who did it. The good things was that once you did get an inkling you were still not sure...
Not read this author before so I’ll definitely keep an eye out for more.
Not read this author before so I’ll definitely keep an eye out for more.
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