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Lisa Regan (2)

Author of Vanishing Girls

For other authors named Lisa Regan, see the disambiguation page.

31 Works 1,410 Members 129 Reviews

Series

Works by Lisa Regan

Vanishing Girls (2017) 231 copies
Finding Claire Fletcher (2012) 144 copies
The Girl with No Name (2018) 127 copies
Her Mother's Grave (2018) 113 copies
Hold Still (2014) 72 copies
Her Final Confession (2018) 65 copies
Kill For You (2013) 61 copies
The Bones She Buried (2019) 60 copies
Her Silent Cry (2019) 51 copies
Losing Leah Holloway (2017) 47 copies
Find Her Alive (2020) 46 copies
Save Her Soul (2020) 40 copies
Cold Heart Creek (2019) 39 copies
Breathe Your Last (2020) 38 copies
Hush Little Girl (2021) 34 copies

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Reviews

Loved it.

If you've read the previous books in this series, picking this one up is a no-brainer.

Each book is fully self-contained, but Josie Quinn and her family and co-workers have ongoing character arcs worth following. So do start from the beginning if you haven't already.

Police procedural thrillers were never my genre, but this series is brilliant. Recommended.
 
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anxovert | 4 other reviews | Apr 28, 2024 |
I am thoroughly convinced that any author named Lisa has a leg up; they are simply amazing those Lisas: Wingate, Jackson, Garnder, Jewell, See, Unger, and Regan. Oh, I'm certain there are more Lisa authors out there I will encounter that are just as talented, but my list for now, is wow enough to proclaim: I'm going to start writing under a Lisa nom de plum.

As to my first Lisa Regan book, Local Girl Missing, this does not disappoint in the Lisa category. Regan has nailed it.

When teenagers Alison and Dina are attacked by a seemingly average architect leaving one of the girls dead and the other missing, Detective Josie Quinn and her officer husband, Noah, are on the chase; to find the truth behind the murder and find the missing girl. But when the architect is found, nothing makes sense, especially when the small town of Denton is turned upside down as mobsters converge and people start turning up tortured and dead.

There is a lot to this book, including many characters that Regan does a fabulous job keeping in check and tying up their loose ends. There are twists and turns in every chapter and the book takes but a minute to read.

If you enjoy a good mystery with a wide cast without an abundance of ancillary blood, gore, or sex, this is perfect for you. Lisa Regan is a great writer with an even better imagination. Oh, and she has the winning name. ;)
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LyndaWolters1 | 2 other reviews | Apr 3, 2024 |
"Mama's gonna make all of your nightmares come true..."

OK. Wow. While the first two books in this series concerned Josie Quinn's pursuit of serial killers, this one is all about Josie - specifically her troubled childhood - alluded to in the first two books and given centre stage here.

I think leaving this story to be told once we know the key players greatly enhances the OMG reveals as Josie investigates the mother she has spent a lifetime trying to forget.

Police procedurals have never been my genre—until now. Recommended, but reading from the beginning of the series is a must.… (more)
 
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anxovert | 5 other reviews | Mar 26, 2024 |
By this 19th instalment in the Josie Quinn police procedural series, Josie, our heroine, has gone through many traumata: The death of her ex-husband, the shooting of her grandmother, and the death of a colleague - things have amassed and despite being in therapy, Josie suffers from severe insomnia and now there’s bad blood between her husband Noah over… something new!

No wonder Josie follows her therapist's advice and goes on a retreat with a renowned trauma therapist in a remote, isolated location in the wilderness - what could possibly go wrong?!

In a setting that reminded me of Agatha Christie’s classic “And Then There Were None”, Josie faces her fear(s) when one of the other participants is murdered… A wild bear also makes an appearance and to top things off, a snowstorm suddenly starts and causes everyone to hole up together - a murderer among them!

Without her team, Josie must not only work on her mental health but also find out who killed the victim. A very dense story unfolds brilliantly with a very interesting cast of characters, some chapters from Noah’s perspective who involuntarily approaches the case from another angle, and breathtaking descriptions.

Investigating without her team, without contact to anyone but the therapist and the other patients around, we get to spend a lot of time in Josie’s head. Her thought processes are clever, a delight to read and mostly very plausible. At other times, the action happens at breakneck speed but Regan manages to always find a fitting pacing and blend from one state to the next.

Even though the area Josie and the others are confined to is very small, Regan masterfully uses every nook and cranny to weave a strong and complex web about murder, guilt, abandonment, child abuse and much more. We dive deep into the past of most of those at the retreat and, of course, especially the much-bemoaned dead granny and the posthumously-sainted colleague take some room - the latter as a “ghost voice” in Josie’s head and in the narration. This is reminiscent of the previous novel during which mourning the dead relegated the actual mystery to the lower ranks. Thankfully, it’s by far less prevalent here.

And while I hate the despicable abomination of a word, this novel for me was basically “unputdownable”. I’m still on sick leave after surgery, so I had ample time to read and this novel was devoured in six hours and 44 minutes.

The usual niggle with these novels is that they contain about 85% actual content and the remaining 15% consist of advertisements for and excerpts from Regan’s other novels. This is annoying and leads to the subtraction of one star from this unusual but very thrilling and satisfying read!

Four out of five stars.

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philantrop | 3 other reviews | Feb 13, 2024 |

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Works
31
Members
1,410
Popularity
#18,226
Rating
4.1
Reviews
129
ISBNs
439
Languages
9

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