Saturday, July 1, 2023

Blood Oranges


Blood Oranges is J. M. Cannon's second novel. She writes crime thrillers and she is a fantastic writer. I was surprised at how complex the plot was given that this is just the author's second book. I loved Blood Oranges immensely.

The publisher's summary:

Money.

Power.

God.

Catherine Cross is the most successful female televangelist in the country. Her congregation in the western suburbs of Orlando one of the wealthiest. She's comfortable and charismatic in front of a camera, but when her youngest daughter goes missing not even she is ready for the media firestorm that follows.

With her mother more concerned about the family's public image than bringing her daughter home, it's up to Emily, the oldest child and black sheep of their christian family, to try to discover the truth.

But when a strange series of deaths on an orange orchard outside of town seems to be connected to her missing sister, the case is turned on its head, and Emily must face the shocking family secrets it took to build her mother's empire.

This book took me on a thrilling ride. I watched closely for any mention of blood oranges  because of the title. There was a little about them mentioned randomly until the final third of the book when it became apparent why they were integral to the story. 

As the summary says, Catherine Cross' daughter went missing. No one knew if her disappearance was related to the other murders but law enforcement believed it was related. I was stunned by Cross's reaction to her favorite child going missing. Since she was a televangelist, her church raised over ten million dollars in just a week. People across the country sent her money for no apparent reason and she refused to return the funds. Not only were the police suspicious but so was oldest daughter Emily.

The story was written from Emily's point of view and she was in most of the scenes. Emily was not loved by her mother which I thought was odd since her mom was a religious figure. I have that expectation that families of faith leaders would be close. Emily loved her sister and was heavily involved in the search for her youngest sister.  

The story is more of a whodunnit than a howdunnit although the how was rather interesting. It has a lightening fast pace and the short chapters created suspense that kept me reading until I had finished the book.

Blood Oranges is a must read. 5 out of 5 stars.

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