From Library Journal
Rookie police officer Pamela Jacoby has been in therapy since her father, also a cop, was killed in the line of duty. Her obsessive feelings about him and his death are overwhelming, and she suffers paralyzing anxiety attacks whenever she attempts intimacy with anyone. Her therapist suggests a new drug regimen just as she has begun a tentative but promising relationship with Graham MacKenzie. After their first attempt at sex, MacKenzie is found bizarrely murdered and Pamela snaps. The ensuing investigation weaves through an intricate maze of law and psychotherapy with steadily mounting tension to a cleverly crafted conclusion. Though not for the squeamish, this compelling first novel is a worthy addition to the current spate of legal/psychological thrillers. Recommended for most collections. BOMC featured alternative.
- Susan Clifford, Hughes Aircraft Co. Lib., Los AngelesCopyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Kirkus Reviews
Psychiatrist Brixton Ferrin attacks his patient Pamela Jacoby's crippling anxiety about men by fixing her up with Mackenzie Graham, another psychiatric patient with a complementary neurosis--he feels unbearable guilt after he was unwittingly conned into killing a man- -only to find the morning after an abortive date sends Pamela into a psychotic episode that Mac has been savagely murdered during the night. Wait, there's more. Pamela, whose revulsion from men (driving her to hours of tastefully detailed masturbation) stems from years of sexual abuse at the hands of her father, the late police officer Wild Bill Jacoby, has become a rookie cop herself, even though she hates the job, in order to live out Wild Bill's life and avenge his murder. So naturally the police chief, sensitive Capt. Amanda Grant, who doesn't want to seem any less idiotic than Dr. Ferrin, includes Pamela on the team investigating the murder even though mountains of evidence indicate that she must have killed Mac Graham. But there's also less- -much less--as endless days and chapters slip away, punctuated only by Pamela's suicide attempt and hysterical confession to the crime and the inevitable political firestorm (represented by one thinly imagined visit to Grant by the mayor), while Grant tracks down a screamingly obvious killer and a motive unobscured by any evocation of setting (the entire novel seems to take place on the undifferentiated space of the movie set that first-novelist Gruenfeld maybe yearns for) or memorable supporting characters (apart from the numbingly loyal investigating team and a few expert consultants, there's barely anybody, memorable or not, on call). Overslung and overwrought--with laughably crude sex, a mystery without a clue, and very little suspense. --
Copyright ©1993, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.