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Fiction. Mystery. Suspense. Thriller. Evan Delaney knew China Lake was a tough place to grow up. But she never knew how tough until now?she returns to the desert military base for her high school reunion, and learns that a number of her classmates have died young. Then, on the first night of the reunion, another one dies? this one savagely butchered. And she?s just the first. Someone has an axe to grind?and Evan?s graduating class has something to fear.Tags
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In the fourth Evan Dalaney novel, Evan returns to China Lake for her high school reunion and discovers that the death toll among her classmates is unusually high. After two classmates are brutally murdered, Evan suspects something is up and begins to piece together what might be killing her classmates.
It all stems back to a day when the group took a field trip to the local Navy base and were exposed to some kind of experiment. The results are still haunting and affecting the group to this day and it also created a serial killer who is hunting down the people on the trip and slowly eliminating them. Evan is forced to dig into her past to find answers and to try and stop the killer before he or she kills again. And when Evan discovers show more she's pregnant, things become even more urgent.
As a check your brain at the door and just enjoy the ride, "Crosscut" works well. But the problems of having a first-person perspective begin to break through as the novel progresses. The story requires that some events unfold outside of Evan's viewpoint and Meg Gardiner shows us those events. It's all about upping the suspence quotient, but unfortunately it proves distracting in the novel's final third. Gardiner is forced to jump between three perspectives in the novel's final pages and it makes the ending seem a bit forced and overly melodramatic.
But the elements that come before it make it worth enduring some clunky writing in the final pages. The story unfolds at a quick pace that keeps the pages turning and will hook you right in. The overall conspiracy nature of what's going on is fascinating and done well enough to keep you guessing about certain elements, all the way up to the final revelations show less
It all stems back to a day when the group took a field trip to the local Navy base and were exposed to some kind of experiment. The results are still haunting and affecting the group to this day and it also created a serial killer who is hunting down the people on the trip and slowly eliminating them. Evan is forced to dig into her past to find answers and to try and stop the killer before he or she kills again. And when Evan discovers show more she's pregnant, things become even more urgent.
As a check your brain at the door and just enjoy the ride, "Crosscut" works well. But the problems of having a first-person perspective begin to break through as the novel progresses. The story requires that some events unfold outside of Evan's viewpoint and Meg Gardiner shows us those events. It's all about upping the suspence quotient, but unfortunately it proves distracting in the novel's final third. Gardiner is forced to jump between three perspectives in the novel's final pages and it makes the ending seem a bit forced and overly melodramatic.
But the elements that come before it make it worth enduring some clunky writing in the final pages. The story unfolds at a quick pace that keeps the pages turning and will hook you right in. The overall conspiracy nature of what's going on is fascinating and done well enough to keep you guessing about certain elements, all the way up to the final revelations show less
Meg Gardiner writes exciting stories with believable characters. In Crosscut, the main character Evan is heading back to her hometown to attend her high school class reunion. But, it doesn't turn out to be the happy get-together they all hoped for. A 'blast from the past' has changed everything and a killer is picking them off,one by one. Evan has to figure out why and who before it's too late. Great action and suspense keeps the reader engaged and turning those pages.
Evan Delany attends a school reunion only find out that a serial killer is killing them all.
plenty of action, suspense and Men in Black conspiracies. the transitions in narrative voice are getting less obtrusive. and the consciously fine writing is also less visable.
a good solid read
plenty of action, suspense and Men in Black conspiracies. the transitions in narrative voice are getting less obtrusive. and the consciously fine writing is also less visable.
a good solid read
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24+ Works 4,548 Members
Meg Gardiner was born in Oklahoma and raised in California. She graduated from Stanford University and practiced law in Los Angeles and taught writing at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Meg authored China Lake which won the 2009 Edgar award and The Dirty Secrets Club which won the Romantic Times Reviewers' Choice Award 2008. The show more Liar's Lullaby (Dutton Adult, June 2010) is her eighth novel. Meg lives with her husband and their three children near London. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Crosscut
- Original title
- Crosscut
- Original publication date
- 2005
- People/Characters
- Evan Delaney
- Important places
- USA; California, USA; China Lake Naval Ordnance Test Station, Mojave Desert, California, USA; Mojave Desert, California, USA; Santa Barbara, California, USA
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 243
- Popularity
- 134,151
- Reviews
- 4
- Rating
- (3.73)
- Languages
- English, German
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 22
- ASINs
- 2




























































