ONE TO WATCH
Author: Rachel Amphlett
Narrator: Alison Campbell
Length: 7 hours 27 minutes
Series: Detective Kay Hunter, Book 3
Publisher: Saxon Publishing
Genre: Mystery, Police Procedural
Sophie Whittaker shared a terrifying secret. Hours later, she was dead.
Detective Kay Hunter and her colleagues are shocked by the vicious murder of a teenage girl at a private party in the Kentish countryside.
A tangled web of dark secrets is exposed as twisted motives point to a history of greed and corruption within the tight-knit community.
Confronted by a growing number of suspects and her own enemies who are waging a vendetta against her, Kay makes a shocking discovery that will make her question her trust in everyone she knows.
One to Watch is a gripping murder mystery thriller, and the third in the Detective Kay Hunter series. A whodunit for fans of Jeffery Deaver, Peter James, David Baldacci, and James Patterson.
RachelAmphlett.com
Before turning to writing, Rachel Amphlett played guitar in bands, worked as a TV and film extra, dabbled in radio as a presenter and freelance producer for the BBC, and worked in publishing as a sub-editor and editorial assistant.
She now wields a pen instead of a plectrum and writes crime fiction and spy novels, including the Dan Taylor espionage novels and the Detective Kay Hunter series.
Originally from the UK and currently based in Brisbane, Australia, Rachel cites her writing influences as Michael Connelly, Lee Child, and Robert Ludlum. She’s also a huge fan of Peter James, Val McDermid, Robert Crais, Stuart MacBride, and many more.
She’s a member of International Thriller Writers and the Crime Writers Association, with the Italian foreign rights for her debut novel, White Gold sold to Fanucci Editore's TIMECrime imprint, and the first four books in the Dan Taylor espionage series contracted to Germany’s Luzifer Verlag.
She now wields a pen instead of a plectrum and writes crime fiction and spy novels, including the Dan Taylor espionage novels and the Detective Kay Hunter series.
Originally from the UK and currently based in Brisbane, Australia, Rachel cites her writing influences as Michael Connelly, Lee Child, and Robert Ludlum. She’s also a huge fan of Peter James, Val McDermid, Robert Crais, Stuart MacBride, and many more.
She’s a member of International Thriller Writers and the Crime Writers Association, with the Italian foreign rights for her debut novel, White Gold sold to Fanucci Editore's TIMECrime imprint, and the first four books in the Dan Taylor espionage series contracted to Germany’s Luzifer Verlag.
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While all of Rachel Amphlett’s books can be read or listened
to on their own, I highly recommend that you read them in order. You get to
know the characters and the situations… it all builds on each other. I love the
way Amphlett writes her short, rapid chapters and how much
it adds to the fast pacing of the book. One to Watch starts off strong and
never lets up, there are no moments of boredom and the pace never lags, right
on through to the end where the twists and turns just keep coming, it’s
fantastic.
I found One to Watch very
intriguing! It really focused on the death of Sophie Whittaker, 16, during a
party celebrating her ‘purity pledge’ and her engagement to Josh. For those
unfamiliar with the ‘purity pledge’, it is a pledge that young girls only… you
know, us women need to be ok with our men not being pure. Typical! Usually
taken between the ages of 12 and 16, it is a part of a Christian movement. What
I really liked was that this book isn’t a highly religious book; it was more of
a backdrop to a murder investigation. Anyway, Kay is still working her side case.
It gets deeper and deeper!
I really enjoy Allison Campbell’s
narration. She is Kay Hunter to me. Campbell speaks so clearly and concisely.
It’s so easy to understand her. Plus the tone of her voice is soothing and I
just like listening to her.
I received this audiobook as part of my participation in a blog tour with Audiobookworm Promotions. The tour is being sponsored by Rachel Amphlett. The gifting of this audiobook did not affect my opinion of it.
Rachel Amphlett's Favourite First-In-Series Crime Fiction
We’re getting ready to move house in the new year, which means at some point I’m going to have to box up all eight bookshelves of crime and thriller books that are currently lining the walls of one of the rooms downstairs.
After sorting out which books would have to go to the charity shop - unless scientists work out a way to clone me in the next fifty years, there’s a very good chance I’ll never get to these a second time around - I was left with some of the crime series that have stayed with me for years, and that I’ll be hanging onto for a long time yet.
This got me thinking: what is it about these first in series novels that still capture my imagination after all this time? And what is it about these books that influence my own writing?
Michael Connelly - The Black Echo (Harry Bosch #1)
Connelly captures so much about his famous detective Harry Bosch in this first novel in the series, but does so without making you feel bombarded by information.
Once a “tunnel rat” in the Vietnam jungle, and now a police detective with the LAPD, Harry Bosch isn’t what I’d call a dynamic character, but he is compelling. It’s his careful consideration of each case that crosses his desk, and the way in which he cares about every single victim no matter their background.
Equally as compelling as Harry Bosch is Connelly’s descriptions of the cityscape within which the stories are based; each location is described in such a way that, for example, by the time you read about Harry heading home of an evening in the latest book in the series, you almost know which CD track he’s going to put on to listen to.
What have I learned from reading the Harry Bosch books? Setting is as important as character.
Peter James – Dead Simple (Roy Grace #1)
Maybe not a book to give to your fiancĂ©e before his stag night…
The first chapter of this book has to be one of the most memorable introductions to a detective series I’ve ever come across, and I won’t spoil it here by telling if you if you haven’t yet read it.
At the end of the first chapter, you’re left in total shock and dying to know what happens next. Told from several points of view, the whole story is turned on its head about two-thirds of the way through and then it’s a fast-paced page-turning read to the end.
What have I learned from reading the Roy Grace books? The books may be named after Roy Grace, but there’s a great ensemble cast, and this is something that felt natural to me as I wrote the first in the Kay Hunter series. I wanted those co-stars to be considered just as important as Kay. After all, no police detective works alone, and there are myriad experts on hand to help solve the case.
Angela Marsons – Silent Scream (Kim Stone #1)
Angela’s Kim Stone books are modern twisty thrillers that bring the genre bang up to date into the twenty-first century and I’ve no doubt this series will endure for a long time yet.
I remember when the first in the series, Silent Scream, was published – everyone was utterly blown away by the story and I recall seeing the book cover everywhere online. In Silent Scream we meet Kim Stone for the first time and quickly realise that if she is to stop a sadistic killer, she’s going to have to confront some very dark memories of her own. Kim Stone is ruthless in her quest for justice for the victims in these novels, and her investigations lead her into dangerous physical and emotional places.
What have I learned from reading the Kim Stone series? The modern detective story has evolved for the twenty-first century, and so have female protagonists.
Lee Child - Killing Floor (Jack Reacher #1)
I remember picking up a second hand copy of Kililng Floor about three years after it was first published, and it really was the first time I’d ever heard of this strange lone wolf character by the name of Jack Reacher.
What have I learned from reading the Jack Reacher books? Use short sentences to keep the action moving along. You don’t often see long sweeping sentences in Lee Child’s novels - they’re punchy, to the point, and don’t waste time.
A bit like Jack Reacher, you might say…
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