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Autumn's Game
Autumn's Game | Mary Stone
1 post | 1 read
'Till death do us part' has never been so true... Armed with a slew of advanced degrees and powerful intuition, forensic psychologist Dr. Autumn Trent is ready to conquer the world and touch the lives of its seven billion inhabitants. She's prepared to fight for justice, right the wrongs...because she knows what it's like to be wronged. As a child, a single blow from her father left her changed forever. Her body survived the aftermath, but her brain was altered in ways that were both good and bad. As a freak, she poured herself into her studies, accumulating all the knowledge she could, intent on whipping broken systems into shape. Take down criminals one by one, even if it means putting her own life on the line. When a brutal double homicide shocks the town of Sawmill, Oregon, the FBI needs Autumn's specialized assistance. The couple's daughter, just beginning a life of her own, disappears the same night as their murder. Was she kidnapped by a merciless killer, or is she his equally heartless accomplice? Or worse? Accompanied by a boss who undermines her instincts and patience at every turn, Autumn soon realizes that their killer has just begun his true mission of punishing parents who break their marital vows. As the body count rises, so do the stakes as the killer escalates quickly. What began as a hunt for a nineteen year old girl turns into Autumn's game of cat and mouse. Autumn's Game, the first book in Mary Stone's Autumn Trent Series, is a riveting psychological murder mystery that will make you watch what you say behind your closed doors and offers an action-packed ride to the very end. Scroll up to one-click your copy today!
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review
ItsAnotherJen
Autumn's Game | Mary Stone
post image
Mehso-so

Mary Stone has quite the fan base. I've never read one of her books, and while this is the first in the Autumn series it seems like you need to read the Winter series to really get into this. I couldn't get past the Autumn and Winter names being just a 'coincidence'. Not a big murder mystery fan. It was an okay read. I liked the psychological insight into the minds of the serial killers. Just not my thing overall.