Pages

Monday, December 8, 2014

Review for Claudia Must Die


Blurb:
Claudia doesn’t feel like herself anymore—she feels like prey. Her husband’s hired goons have stalked her all the way to Boston and will only stop their pursuit once she is dead.

Divorce is not an option. Instead, she has stolen a bunch of her man’s money to disappear into another life.

In order for Claudia to live, someone else must die. A lookalike college student becomes the target capable of freeing her from an awful marriage. 

The plan goes horribly awry. Instead of murdering Claudia’s double, the assassins shoot the woman’s lover who is the cousin of a powerful Irish mobster. Claudia becomes hunted by all involved. Can she survive? Should she?

My review:
Claudia has become the hunted. Her mobster husband will stop at nothing to see her dead, and Claudia will do whatever it takes to stay alive. Even if that means she has to set another woman up to take her place. Everything erupts into chaos when the assassins miss and an innocent woman is killed. Claudia is back on the run, and this time, she's hitched a ride with her lookalike and vengeful friend. Surrounded by people who want to kill her, how will she survive?

This unique thriller keeps you on the edge of your seat. It's intense and quirky in a way that reminded me a bit of Pulp Fiction. We have fantastic characterization along with unexpected twists and turns in the plot. It's dark and gritty with the right dose of humor.

I confess I wanted to kill Claudia myself. She's impulsive and selfish, but she's a fighter. I could sympathize with her wanting to be free of her abusive husband, but she went to great lengths which included setting up Parker, a woman who looks just like her, up as the assassins' target. Parker was fascinating. Quiet yet deep, I connected with her and rooted for her survival. The Woolf brothers and Francis were just as entertaining.

This was an awesome read! T.B. Markinson hasn't let me down yet. I highly recommend this book and all her excellent works.

Excerpt:
At first, everything had been roses and wine. When others warned her about Dennis, Claudia laughed it off. 
Use your head,” Claudia’s mother had said. “How could a man in his early thirties make so much money owning a handful of run-down bars in two small towns in the West?”
What, you think he’s a drug dealer or something?” Claudia had broken into hysterics. “He hardly looks like a gangster, Mother. Dennis doesn’t wear any jewelry. Not even a wedding ring.
In Claudia’s mind, a gangster would at least wear a gold necklace. And, he had excellent table manners. There was no way Dennis could be a thug. How many scrawny five-foot-six guys were?
 
They had married after seven months. Neither had intended to marry so quickly, but they had visited Vegas for a long weekend, got drunk, and got hitched. It wasn’t until Claudia moved into Dennis’s house that she started to notice things. He wouldn’t come home for days, and when he did, he refused to tell her where he had been. He racked up a lot of mileage on her car, not his. When Claudia asked about it, his reply was a cold stare that made her legs feel like jelly. Granted, one of his bars was in Greeley, but that was only a twenty-minute drive from their home in Loveland. How did the miles add up so quickly?
After a year, they started to fight constantly. Verbal arguments. After another year, the fights turned violent. Claudia ended up in the hospital—still nothing serious enough for her to walk out. Not yet. Instead, she started hoarding cash. In the beginning, it was a little bit here and there. It was simple. Claudia would request cash back when she used her debit card at the grocery store. Dennis liked her cooking; he never questioned how much his wife spent on food. When she realized her embezzlement plan would take years, not months, The Hunted chose a more drastic solution. The next time her husband crossed the line …

About the Author:
T. B. Markinson is an American writer, living in England. When she isn’t writing, she’s traveling around the world, watching sports on the telly, visiting pubs in England, or taking the dog for a walk. Not necessarily in that order. T. B. has published A Woman Lost, Marionette, and Confessions From A Coffee Shop.

Mailing List: Sign up to TB’s New Release Mailing List here. Your email will never be shared and you will only be contacted when a new book is out.
 
Links: Twitter Facebook Blog Goodreads Amazon Author Page


Purchase Links: Amazon (US) / Amazon (UK)

16 comments:

  1. Great review! This book sounds so intense. It's nice to know there's a little humor, too--that's always fun to read, no matter what the genre!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Sounds very suspenseful. Thanks for the review.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thanks so much for the review and support!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Parker sounds like she offsets Claudia.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Great review! It's not easy to pull off a book with an unlikeable main character.

    ReplyDelete
  6. what a reat review! love pulp fiction! I'm so intrigued!

    ReplyDelete
  7. It definitely sounds like a good read!

    ReplyDelete
  8. Sounds like a really compelling read. I like the lines about how Claudia doesn't suspect he's a gangster since he doesn't look the stereotypical part. It's always the ones you least suspect.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Sounds very tense with some interesting characters on both sides of the issue.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Sounds very intense. Great review.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Excellent review. It does sound like she is as merciless as the husband she is trying to escape.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Thank you for commenting, everyone. It's an awesome book!

    ReplyDelete
  13. Terrific Review, though I enjoy many of your reviews so maybe I'm biased. :) I agree with others, the book does sound intense.

    ReplyDelete
  14. I love dark and gritty novels :)

    ReplyDelete
  15. Christine, thanks for sharing your review of this book.

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.