Eeny Meeny: DI Helen Grace 1

· Detective Inspector Helen Grace Book 1 · Penguin UK
4.3
244 reviews
Ebook
448
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

THE ROCKET-PACED SERIAL-KILLER THRILLER AND RICHARD & JUDY BOOK CLUB PICK FROM M. J. ARLIDGE

'What a great premise! Detective Inspector Helen Grace is one of the greatest heroes to come along in years'
JEFFERY DEAVER
'Wow! A gripping read from the very beginning' 5***** Reader Review
________

The girl emerged from the woods, barely alive. Her story was beyond belief. But it was true. Every dreadful word of it.

Days later, another desperate escapee is found - and a pattern is emerging.

Pairs of victims are being abducted, imprisoned then faced with a terrible choice:

Kill or be killed.

As Detective Inspector Helen Grace leads the investigation to hunt down this unseen monster, she learns that it may be the survivors - living calling cards - who hold the key to the case.

And unless she succeeds, more innocents will die . . .
________

'A serial killer thriller that holds your attention from start to finish' 5***** Reader Review


'This is going to be as big as Jo Nesbo' Judy Finnigan

Praise for M.J. Arlidge and the DI Helen Grace series:

'M. J. Arlidge has created a genuinely fresh heroine in DI Helen Grace' Daily Mail

'Taut, fast-paced, truly excellent' Sun

'Gruesomely realistic, intriguing and relentless' Sunday Sport

'Eeny Meeny debuts one of the best new series detectives, Helen Grace. Determined, tough and damaged, she must unravel a terrifying riddle of a killer kidnapping victims in pairs. Mesmerizing!' Lisa Gardner

'A gripping debut . . . D.I. Helen Grace is a flawed but winning heroine. And, boy, the pages fly by' USA Today

'A fast-paced, twisting police procedural and thriller that's sure to become another bestseller' Huffington Post

Ratings and reviews

4.3
244 reviews
Midge Odonnell
January 8, 2018
This book started off so promisingly and in the proscribed way with a detailing of a Serial Killer's capture and ultimate desecration of their victim. This killer is different though they have two people at once and only they can decide who can live or die. Traces of the Saw films in the premise of having two people held captive and they have to battle each other for life. Still, I can overlook that as at least these weren't strangers to each other so there is an added element of emotion to the crime. Indeed the first crime is handled well and the writing is claustrophobic and tense sucking you in the depraved web of the killer's psyche. Unfortunately, once you are past this bit the tale begins to wilt under a plethora of stale old tropes. We have the ambitious policewoman who has been fast tracked to Detective Inspector who hates herself and has no time for anything but her job. The "good copper" who is crippled by his broken marriage and subsequent turn to alcohol as an amelioration and crutch. Cue much mental eye-rolling when reading these sections. The abductions also become much less intriguing and even verge on the downright silly in places. Believability is not the key here, in fact a healthy suspension of belief is required to get more than halfway through this book. Some of the peripheral characters are just downright unlikeable and fall in to the pit of being completely unbelievable as people. The journalist and the psychotherapist are two such that have no redeeming characteristics whatsoever. Unfortunately, they are both supposed to be strong women, like our intrepid DI Grace, but just come across as bitter and callous. The sidestep in to police corruption and mishandling of evidence and interview tapes is tedious and seems to have been thrown in to pad the book to a decent length. Whilst I understand the need to undermine the head of the team to juxtapose the "old force" and it's mainly old boy's club feeling and the bright dawn of the "new force" which is inclusive it is handled clumsily. Certainly if this is what you want to read then you would be far better picking up a book from Lynda La Plante's Jane Tennyson series. Now you would think from the above that I would have only given this book 1 or 2 stars; yet I gave it 3. The simple reason for this is that there are sparks of brilliance in this book. You definitely don't know who could be possibly committing these atrocities and feel as clueless as the MIT investigating them. The information is drip fed in such a way that you are forced to jump to the same conclusions as the officers and the final reveal is a nasty little twist in the tale. It is the plot arc that makes the book, just a pity that the writing is very often not up to it. I'm not entirely sure I would read any more of the Helen Grace series but I certainly won't write them, or their author, off yet.
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Richard Richard
March 9, 2018
Ineffective, tedious and lacklustre story featuring soulless cardboard cut-out characters told with a foggy monotonous narrative. Now, with my eyes glazed over in utter boredom, I can't help thinking that the only serious crime committed here is that the author botched a real opportunity to do so much more with such a robust premise. Poor.
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Lindsay Booth
September 23, 2014
I enjoyed this book. I like crime thrillers and this had a unique story line and you really was left wondering 'whodunnit' however whilst I accept that some artistic licence is needed when covering the police investigation elements to the book, the inaccuracies were too much for me. I am not sure if the author did research into this element, or if they did they completed disregarded it. Only bugbear for me.
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About the author

M. J. Arlidge has worked in television for the last fifteen years, specializing in high-end drama production, including the prime-time crime serials Torn, The Little House and Silent Witness. Arlidge also pilots original crime series for both UK and US networks. In 2015 his audio exclusive Six Degrees of Assassination was a Number One bestseller.

His first thriller, Eeny Meeny, was the UK's bestselling crime debut of 2014. It was followed by the bestselling Pop Goes the Weasel, The Doll's House, Liar Liar, Little Boy Blue, Hide and Seek, Love Me Not, and Down to the Woods.

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