Friday, October 8, 2021

Nine Lives Review


Author: Peter Swanson
Genre: Mystery Suspense
Publisher: William Morrow
Release Date: March 15, 2022
Order Link: Amazon

My Rating: 4 Mysterious Hearts
Review published in Mystery & Suspense Magazine

Special thanks to the publisher for an arc of this book.

From the New York Times best-selling author of Eight Perfect Murders comes the heart-pounding story of nine strangers who receive a cryptic list with their names on it - and then begin to die in highly unusual circumstances.

Review:
Nine names. Nine random people living all over the country working in vastly different fields from an oncologist nurse to an FBI agent.  What do they have in common?  They all received an envelope with a single sheet of paper bearing nine names . . . including their own.  What does it mean?  A joke?  A mistake?  Some trash it without a second thought.  Others lay it aside to think about later.  FBI agent Jessica Winslow has an inclination that it's bad news and starts a search to identify the other people listed while seeking answers, looking for connections between herself and anyone on the list and finding none.  When she hears reports of a man drowned on a beach whose head was held down in a pool of water and his identity matches a name from the list, the agent's gut feeling is confirmed . . .  she's in possession of a kill list with her own name on it.  When a second and then third person are murdered, Agent Winslow is pulled from the case and put under police protection as are the other identified people on the list while authorities frantically search for the unknown people to inform them their lives are in danger.  The race is on to figure out what connects these people and why someone would want them all dead.  Meantime, everyone is looking over their shoulder wondering which one of them will be next?

Peter Swanson renders a complex murder mystery in Nine Lives and challenges readers to solve it.  Alternating chapters with multiple points of view exposes the internal turmoil occurring in each of the listed nine people's lives.  One can easily deduce that all is not as it appears, secrets are being kept and information withheld.  And the elusive thread that connects these people one to the other as well as to a murderer remains just out of grasp.  Chapters count down from nine to none, lending a sense of urgency to the story as each lower number means another victim.  First there are nine . . . until finally there are none.  Are you getting vibes of Agatha Christies' And Then There Were None?  I did.  

Swanson's unique, clean writing style proves to be the perfect tool for delivering Nine Lives in a highly effective, look over your shoulder kind of way.  Short chapters deliver the details with a mysterious, eerie tone of impending doom, pulling readers into each of these people's lives - just in time to snuff them out.  No one is safe - police protection or not.  The rapidly escalating pace is like a time bomb seconds from blowing - time growing ever shorter as the chapters and lives dwindle down.  I found the delivery of this highly atmospheric story to be brilliant as it really puts solving the mystery in readers' hands.  We know what's in each person's head, but we don't know the identity of the villain . . .  and neither do authorities.  As the list grew shorter, I had an inkling of what was going on and yet, the insane twist right at the end knocked me for a loop.  Readers who love to dive deep into a mystery and work the clues with the clock ticking will devour Nine Lives.  Highly recommended.

Synopsis:
Nine strangers receive a list with their names on it in the mail. Nothing else, just a list of names on a single sheet of paper. None of the nine people know or have ever met the others on the list. They dismiss it as junk mail, a fluke - until very, very bad things begin happening to people on the list. First, a well-liked old man is drowned on a beach in the small town of Kennewick, Maine. Then, a father is shot in the back while running through his quiet neighborhood in suburban Massachusetts. A frightening pattern is emerging, but what do these nine people have in common? Their professions range from oncology nurse to aspiring actor.

FBI agent Jessica Winslow, who is on the list herself, is determined to find out. Could there be some dark secret that binds them all together? Or is this the work of a murderous madman? As the mysterious sender stalks these nine strangers, they find themselves constantly looking over their shoulders, wondering who will be crossed off next....


Peter Swanson is the author of six novels including The Kind Worth Killing, winner of the New England Society Book Award, and finalist for the CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger, Her Every Fear, an NPR book of the year, and his most recent thriller, Eight Perfect Murders. His books have been translated into 30 languages, and his stories, poetry, and features have appeared in Asimov’s Science Fiction, The Atlantic Monthly, Measure, The Guardian, The Strand Magazine, and Yankee Magazine.


A graduate of Trinity College, the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, and Emerson College, he lives in Somerville, Massachusetts with his wife and cat.


1 comment:

Carla Loves to Read said...

I do enjoy Peter Swanson's books. his mind must be so twisted. This sounds like a good one, and I will add it to my waiting for list. Nice review.