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Secret's Shadow (Cassidy McCabe Mystery #1) by Alex Matthews — book cover

Secret's Shadow (Cassidy McCabe Mystery #1)

by Alex Matthews
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Overview

Psychotherapist Cassidy McCabe thinks her life is complicated enough. She doesn’t need the distress of a client’s suicide, the hassle of a homeless cat, or the aggravation of the client’s black sheep brother. When Cass learns that her client Ryan Hollister shot himself and left a note blaming the therapy, her every instinct tells her it couldn’t be true. He was depressed, but not suicidal. Or did she miss the signals? Or—worse yet—was she so attracted she failed to see the real man and the depth of his problems?

When Ryan’s family threatens to sue, she teams up with his brother to uncover the truth. And the closer she gets to the answer, the closer the killer comes to her.

Synopsis

It's a therapist's worst nightmare when a client apparently commits suicide and his note blames Cassidy.

Publishers Weekly

Despite solving a murder, Cassidy McCabe emerges from this soapy melodrama as an ineffectual therapist who gives airheads a bad name. A client, Ryan Hollister, wrote a suicide note before (apparently) killing himself; but Ryan's half-brother, reporter Zach Moran, thinks another hand pulled the trigger and wants Cass, with her privileged information, to help him find the killer. But how much help can she be? Her mind often wanders during therapy sessions ("This gets so boring," she thinks while listening to a young woman patient. "What a bimbo"). She is further distracted by both the critical voice of her mother she carries in her head and the fact that her feckless ex-husband has used her suburban Chicago house as collateral for a loan from the mob and now can't repay it. While Zach and Cass, getting friendlier all the while, sort through the skeletons in the Hollister family closet, Cass hopes that the mob's thugs will stop pestering her if she just ignores them and wonders why she isn't receiving all her phone messages, even though she must repeatedly be reminded that she should lock her back door. The mystery of whodunit pales next to the questions of how this sleuth ever made it through college or got her license. (Apr.)

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Despite solving a murder, Cassidy McCabe emerges from this soapy melodrama as an ineffectual therapist who gives airheads a bad name. A client, Ryan Hollister, wrote a suicide note before (apparently) killing himself; but Ryan's half-brother, reporter Zach Moran, thinks another hand pulled the trigger and wants Cass, with her privileged information, to help him find the killer. But how much help can she be? Her mind often wanders during therapy sessions ("This gets so boring," she thinks while listening to a young woman patient. "What a bimbo"). She is further distracted by both the critical voice of her mother she carries in her head and the fact that her feckless ex-husband has used her suburban Chicago house as collateral for a loan from the mob and now can't repay it. While Zach and Cass, getting friendlier all the while, sort through the skeletons in the Hollister family closet, Cass hopes that the mob's thugs will stop pestering her if she just ignores them and wonders why she isn't receiving all her phone messages, even though she must repeatedly be reminded that she should lock her back door. The mystery of whodunit pales next to the questions of how this sleuth ever made it through college or got her license. (Apr.)

I Love a Mystery

The prose is punchy, vivid and lean. Combined with seamless plotting and a compelling story, this makes for enjoyable reading.

I Love a Mystery

The prose is punchy, vivid and lean. Combined with seamless plotting and a compelling story, this makes for enjoyable reading.

Book Details

Published
December 1, 2004
Publisher
Big Earth Publishing
Pages
347
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781890768034

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