Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Let's Play Fair by KM Rockwood

Recently, I had few days with an extended window of opportunity to read! What heaven. I have a huge, varied TBR list. What shall I choose?

I go for the latest work of a favorite author who writes a beloved series of crime novels with strong mystery and thriller bends.

The book starts out invitingly. It’s Christmas time, with a raging snowstorm. I know Elmore Leonard’s first rule of writing is to never start with the weather, but like all rules, it’s meant to be broken. In this case, it looks like the weather will end up a true character, a hovering reality which presents challenges and obstacles, forming an intrinsic force in the story.

There’s some vague advanced technology featured which doesn’t ring true to me, but hey, I’m not up on what’s feasible and what’s not. Additionally, this is fiction. If an author wants to create things that don’t exist but make sense in the context of the story, fine by me. I’ll believe in it.

Some mysteries are who-dun-its, inviting the reader to try to figure out the solution along with the protagonist. While I do enjoy those novels, and I will give some thought to figuring things out, I don’t mind letting the story flow along, and I’m never disappointed if I am wrong. I also like the complicated crime novels, like Midsomer Murders, where so much is going on that I find it virtually impossible to solve the mystery myself. It doesn’t bother me that there doesn’t seem to be either solid clues or red herrings, although I do take note of a few odd happenings.

Partway into the story, the weather seems to lose its grip on the situation. The storm continues, but now that characters have to get to a destination reasonably quickly, traffic is conveniently no longer snarled by snow and wind. In fact, the protagonist is involved in a traffic stop. Not only is the officer apparently unconcerned about the difficult driving conditions and vehicles in distress, he conducts the traffic stop standing by the driver’s window with no regard for the pelting snow and fierce wind which must make it difficult to even stand there, much less have a drawn-out interaction with those in the car.

When the characters get to the crime scene, suddenly helicopters have no problem being dispatched to fly over the area. This is in northern Virginia, apparently along the Potomac River. If the weather conditions permit air traffic, it should be a very crowded area, with close monitoring by air traffic controllers. Most of us remember what happened when a military helicopter in the area asked for visual clearance and then collided with an airliner approaching one of the three major commercial airports in the area. Operator’s whimsey seems to be the controlling factor of this helicopter’s operation. Then our protagonists are whisked away by helicopter to another location to do more investigating, weather conditions and other air traffic be damned.


I can’t say I don’t find these issues disturbing, but the story is intriguing. There is a vicious serial murderer at work, and a very limited repertoire of possible suspects. All is tightly woven together. I tell myself I must have missed clues, both subtle and major. I feel invested in most of these characters.

I eagerly approach the dénouement.

When it comes, the villain is someone who has made no previous appearance in the story at all. Or whose existence has even been hinted at.

A deus ex machina solution? The “god of the machine,” where in Greek plays a god descends to settle all matters pretty much regardless of what went on previously in the entire story?

Pretty much.

I was disappointed. I felt like I had been cheated, wasting my time and musings.

I’m not going to mention the book or the author, since I recognize that perhaps others may view the story differently and enjoy it. I don’t want to take away either from the author’s hard work or another reader’s enjoyment. But I do have to say this series is no longer on my list of eagerly anticipated new releases.

Have you ever met with disappointment from an eagerly anticipated book from a favorite author?


12 comments:

  1. I have found this to be the case with several long running series. At times, it feels like the author is dialing it in or reusing plots. Sometimes this is when an author went from one book a year to two books a year. Sometimes, it simply feels the cash cow series has run out of legs. A few times, it has been the scenario you describe. That said, most books delight rather than frustrating me.

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  2. You've described what is for me a throw-it-across-the-room book. If it's a new-to-me author, they will be on my no-read list in perpetuity. If I have loved their earlier books, I'll give them one more chance to redeem themselves.

    Most frustrating are authors who have several great books, a dud, some more excellent reads and then another dud worse than the first one. That puts me in a quandary. Do I risk another disappointment for the possibility of an excellent book?

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    1. A good plan. One more try for the series. But it's definitely not going to be at the top of my TBR list.

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  3. I find that very frustrating, and like Jim, I usually move on to a new series.

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    1. Yes, our reading time is limited, but the available books are not.

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  4. Yes, it happens. I've stopped reading several authors because their books are repetitive, twice the length of a standard mystery (600+ pages instead of 300-400), and the characters haven't changed or grown.

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  5. Sometimes I don't mind if the character doesn't grow (Agatha Raisin, for instance) but if the series grows stale, I will move on.

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  6. Oh, how frustrating! That would sour me on the author for sure. I've had that experience in movies, too.

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  7. I’m so sorry that happened, Kathleen. Yes, there was an author I adored. Waited with bated breath for every new mystery novel until….the author changed pov, appeared to bring in villains and victims from the ozone, and made the stories about the protagonist not the mystery. It was disappointing, but I soldiered on to the next release. When the new book featured more of the same, I gave up. It’s funny, that was probably fifteen years ago, but the trust between reader and writer, once lost, was irredeemable.

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  8. Kathleen, I stopped reading a very popular author because her killer hardly appeared until the end of the book. Not fair to readers.

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  9. It sounds like the author had a deadline and finished up quickly to meet that deadline. Disappointing. But to have the villain be someone not even mentioned in the book! Sounds like the author got her manuscripts mixed up. Shame on the editor who didn't pick up on that.

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