Thursday’s Mystery eBooks

How to Kill Men and Get Away With It
by Katy Brent
Rating: 4.0 #ad

KINDLEAUDIBLENOOKKOBO APPLE

Meet Kitty Collins. FRIEND. LOVER. KILLER.

He was following me. That guy from the nightclub who wouldn’t leave me alone.

I hadn’t intended to kill him of course. But I wasn’t displeased when I did and, despite the mess I made, I appeared to get away with it. That’s where my addiction started… I’ve got a taste for revenge and quite frankly, I’m killing it.


Never Enough
by Joe McGinniss
Rating: 4.3 #ad

KINDLEAUDIBLENOOKKOBO APPLE

The shocking true story of greed, murder, and a family torn apart.

At thirty-nine, Nancy Kissel had it all: glamour, gusto, garishly flaunted wealth, and the royal lifestyle of the expatriate wife. Not to mention three young children and what a friend described as “the best marriage in the universe.” That marriage—to Merrill Lynch and former Goldman Sachs investment banker Robert Kissel—ended abruptly one November night in 2003 in the bedroom of their luxury apartment high above Hong Kong’s glittering Victoria Harbour. Why?

Hong Kong prosecutors, who charged Nancy with murder, said she wanted to inherit Rob’s millions and start a new life with a blue-collar lover who lived in a New Hampshire trailer park.


Coma
by Robin Cook
Rating: 4.4 #ad

KINDLENOOKKOBO APPLE

The blockbuster bestseller that kickstarted a new genre–the medical thriller–is now available in trade paperback for the first time.

They called it “minor surgery,” but Nancy Greenly, Sean Berman and a dozen others–all admitted to Boston Memorial Hospital for routine procedures–were victims of the same inexplicable, hideous tragedy on the operating table. They never woke up.

Susan Wheeler is a third-year medical student working as a trainee at Boston Memorial Hospital. Two patients during her residency mysteriously go into comas immediately after their operations due to complications from anesthesia. Susan begins to investigate the causes behind both of these alarming comas and discovers the oxygen line in Operating Room 8 has been tampered with to induce carbon monoxide poisoning.


The Widow
by Kaira Rouda
Rating: 4.1 #ad

KINDLEAUDIBLE

A husband with secrets. A wife with no limits. A riveting novel of marriage, privilege, and lies by Kaira Rouda, the USA Today bestselling author of The Next Wife.

Jody Asher had a plan. Her charismatic husband, Martin, would be a political icon. She, the charming wife, would fuel his success. For fifteen congressional terms, they were the golden couple on the Hill. Life was good. Until he wasn’t.

Martin’s secret affair with a young staffer doesn’t bother Jody personally. But professionally?


The K Team
by David Rosenfelt
Rating: 4.3 #ad

KINDLEAUDIBLENOOKKOBO APPLE

From bestselling mystery author David Rosenfelt comes a new series – a spinoff of the much beloved Andy Carpenter mysteries – about a dynamic new investigative team featuring a determined former cop and his loyal German Shepherd.

Corey Douglas and his K-9 partner, Simon Garfunkel, have recently retired from the police force. Not ready to give up the life yet, they come up with a proposal for fellow former cop, Laurie Carpenter, and her investigating partner, Marcus. Laurie and Marcus – who help out Laurie’s lawyer husband Andy on cases – have been chafing to jump back into investigating on their own, so they are in.


Charles Douglas
by Jesse Storm
Rating: 5.0 #ad

KINDLE

The man who raised Charles Douglas is a criminal. He has escaped prison and he is out there, killing innocent people.

It couldn’t go on.

Charles is hoping that his father’s capture is going to be as sudden as his prison escape. He needs it to be over. He doesn’t want his thirteen-year-old son knowing that his grandfather is doing what he is doing.

Only one thing makes sense to him. If there has to be a man to capture Jake Douglas, then who better than his own son?


The Munich Girl
by Phyllis Edgerly Ring
Rating: 4.2 #ad

KINDLENOOKKOBO APPLE

Anna Dahlberg grew up eating dinner under her father’s war-trophy portrait of Eva Braun. Fifty years after the war, she discovers what he never did—that her mother and Hitler’s mistress were friends.

The secret surfaces with a mysterious monogrammed handkerchief, and a man, Hannes Ritter, whose Third Reich family history is entwined with Anna’s.

Plunged into the world of the “ordinary” Munich girl who was her mother’s confidante—and a tyrant’s lover—Anna finds her every belief about right and wrong challenged.