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All the Dead Girls
All the Dead Girls
All the Dead Girls
Audiobook8 hours

All the Dead Girls

Written by Rita Herron

Narrated by Eric G. Dove

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

()

About this audiobook

A RITA Award finalist, Romantic Suspense.

When a violent storm hits Graveyard Falls, it unearths the unimaginable: skeletons of teenage girls, each dressed in white and holding a candle. It’s clear to FBI agent Beth Fields that this is the work of a long-standing killer—but could it be the one she escaped years ago? She has no memory of the man who held her captive and murdered her friend. But even though someone was jailed for the crime, she’s always feared that the real killer is still out there…waiting and watching.

Ian Kimball never believed his stepfather was guilty of Beth’s kidnapping or the slaying of two local girls. Now Graveyard Falls’s sheriff, he’s determined to catch the true perpetrator. And when more young women go missing, he realizes he needs Beth’s help. She is nothing like Ian expected, and everything he desires. But if they have any hope of finally ending the killer’s reign of terror, Beth and Ian will need to put everything aside, including their past, their mistrust, and their growing attraction…

LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 22, 2016
ISBN9781531866327
All the Dead Girls
Author

Rita Herron

USA Today bestselling author Rita Herron fell in love with books at the ripe old age of eight, when she read her first Trixie Belden mystery. Twenty years ago, she traded her job as a kindergarten teacher for one as a writer, and she now has more than ninety romance novels to her credit. She loves penning dark romantic suspense tales, especially those set in small southern towns. Her awards include a Career Achievement Award from RT Book Reviews for her work in Series Romantic Suspense, the National Readers’ Choice Award, and a RITA nomination. She has received rave reviews for the Slaughter Creek novels (Dying to Tell and Her Dying Breath) and her Graveyard Falls novels (All the Dead Girls, All the Pretty Faces, and All the Beautiful Brides). Rita is a native of Atlanta, Georgia, and a proud mother and grandmother.

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Reviews for All the Dead Girls

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

16 ratings2 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Suspense was excellent! I didn’t figure out the identity of the serial killer...smh.
    Totally recommend this book
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    A tornado uncovers a horrific burial ground in the town of Graveyard Falls. FBI agent Beth Fields is certain the killing of the teenage girls buried there has been going on for years. The body of each girl, dressed in a white gown and holding a candle, attests to death at the hands of a demented serial killer. Both Beth and the town’s sheriff, Ian Kimball, have personal reasons for wanting to identify both the victims and the killer. But will their investigation cost them everything?The implausibility of major plot points makes it difficult for the reader to suspend disbelief and become fully involved in the telling of this tale . . . . Neither the FBI nor the sheriff’s department would allow either Beth or Ian anywhere near this investigation. Law enforcement plays a crucial role in the story, yet time after time their actions fail to mirror actual investigative procedures used by law enforcement personnel and thus lack any hint of credibility, a fact that seriously jeopardizes the story-telling. The “romance” story line was mostly gratuitous and cringe-worthy.And why are all the smart high school kids ostracized?Most readers are reasonably perceptive. There’s no need for ad nauseam repetition about past actions that now create guilt or elicit fear . . . the constant reiteration here frustrates the reader and keeps the story from moving forward. Characterizations that play to racial or societal stereotypes are objectionable on every level. So is the gratuitous sex scene in a completely unbelievable romance.And the “blame it on the deviant religious cult” is such a tired and over-used cliché that’s likely to alienate a good many readers, especially since the astute ones will have identified the true villains long before the anticlimactic reveal.