Relationships are challenging enough for most single over-thirty women. For level ten parasensitive Clare Lancaster, they're a minefield. The elite few who know her secret call her a human lie detector, and any falsehood, no matter how subtle or well hidden, sets her blood racing. Over the years, Clare has come to accept that someone with her extraordinary talents is unlikely to find a suitable mate. And she's even resigned herself to the fact that everyone, to one degree or another, hides behind a façade.
Including her recently deceased brother-in-law. When Clare finds the body of Brad McAllister, the golden child of Stone Canyon, Arizona, the posh residents turn a suspicious eye in her direction. As Archer Glazebrook's daughter, Clare is shielded from the law, but not the gossip. It seems that meeting the half sister and family whom she did not know until seven months ago was a mistake. Now her father summons her from California to play a role in his business empire, and Clare doesn't intend on making the same mistake twice. But after meeting Jake Salter, Archer's "business consultant," she is convinced that things aren't what they seem. Salter's careful conversation walks a delicate line between truth and deception, revealing and resisting. Something sparks and sizzles between them - something more than the usual electricity between a man and a woman.
Caught in a dizzying storm of secrets, lies, and half-truths, Jake and Clare will plunge into an investigation that demands every bit of their special gifts. Together, they must overcome their mutual distrust in order to unravel a web of conspiracy and murder.
In this Arcane Society novel, human lie detector Clare Lancaster comes under suspicion for murder. Romantic sparks fly when Jake Salter, an agent for Jones & Jones, meets Clare and finds her a fascinating but infuriating distraction to his mission. The story is typical Krentz--great fun--but the presentation is not. David Colacci's voice work is perfect, but Kathy Garver's is both poorly cast and irritating. Her character accents aren't consistent, and she runs out of breath and drops her voice repeatedly. Furthermore, she makes little differentiation between narrative and characterization. There is even a noticeable difference in the volume of the two narrators' mikes in the first part of the story. All in all, one to skip. A.C.P. (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine
About the Author
Jayne Ann Krentz is the author of forty New York Times bestsellers. She has written contemporary romantic suspense novels under that name, as well as futuristic and historical romance novels under the pseudonyms Jayne Castle and Amanda Quick. She lives in Seattle.
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