Prologue: Rochester, July 1989
You could tell a thunderstorm was close. The air was thick with humidity, the clouds approaching from Lake Ontario an angry grey. Though Upstate New York is known for its long, harsh winters, any Rochester native will tell you a summer storm can wreak more havoc in ten minutes than a foot of snow falling over ten hours. But these were the dog days of the summer of ’89. The two eight-year-old girls jumping rope on the driveway of a large white colonial at 55 Burt Street in the Park Avenue district hadn’t noticed what was coming.
The dark-haired girl who lived in the house saw the car first – a gleaming white BMW speeding toward them. It suddenly screeched to a stop in front of the driveway. A man in his late forties, wearing a polo shirt and shorts, jumped out, obviously agitated.
The man said his name was Mr. Winslow and he worked with Amy’s dad. In one excited breath, Mr. Winslow told Amy her father was in a terrible accident. He was driving through the construction to rebuild the notorious “Can of Worms” interchange when a concrete piling crashed down on his car. He said that her father was rushed to Strong Memorial Hospital, and he’d come to take Amy there.
Amy started to cry and follow Mr. Winslow to his car. But the dark-haired girl sensed something she couldn’t explain. Before she even knew she was saying it, she asked Mr. Winslow who had sent him.
The question caught Mr. Winslow off guard. He gave the dark-haired girl a look and told her his boss sent him to pick up Amy. Again, Amy assured her friend it was okay. Mr. Winslow wasn’t a stranger.
But the dark-haired girl couldn’t shake the feeling in the pit of her stomach. She remembered the warnings from her mother, who said she asked too many questions, a habit that was going to get her into trouble someday. But the dark-haired girl had to know more.
So she asked Mr. Winslow why he wasn’t wearing a suit like Amy’s father did if he came straight from work. Mr. Winslow answered he’d been at the driving range when the boss called him there.
Then she asked how he knew Amy was at this house and not her own.
Mr. Winslow let out a deep breath, then said his boss had called Amy’s mother. She told him about their play date. He then quickly opened the passenger door. They had to get to the hospital.
But the dark-haired girl’s questions now bothered Amy. She said she was going inside to call her mother.
The dark-haired girl blinked and then turned and raced up to the house. She assumed Amy was behind her until she heard a sudden rush of footsteps.
She turned back just as Amy screamed. Mr. Winslow had picked Amy up, and was shoving her into the front seat of his car.
The dark-haired girl’s screams were drowned out by a succession of thunderclaps, and the downpour that followed. As the rain soaked through her clothes, she was too scared to move. All she could do was stand there and watch the BMW drive away.
Copyright © 2012 by Neal Baer & Jonathan Greene
Haunted by a childhood brush with a vicious unsolved crime—the abduction of her best friend—Dr. Claire Waters confronts her own worst fears when she takes on her first serial killer case. She meets with Todd Quimby at Rikers Island prison and as she cracks his tough exterior, she overlooks his violent nature and recommends his release. Within 24 hours, a woman’s body is found in Times Square bearing all the marks of a Quimby victim.
As bodies pile up followed by taunting messages from the killer, Claire convinces Det. Nick Lawler to use her as a decoy. What happens next makes Kill Switch, by TV producers Neal Baer and Jonathan Greene, sizzle as Claire risks everything to catch a killer and uncovers a conspiracy every bit as deadly.
Hardcover : 304 pages
Publisher: Kensington Publishing Corp. ( December 27, 2011 )
Item #: 13-488574
ISBN: 9780758266866
Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.25 x 0.68inches
Product Weight: 12.0 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

Right from the start to very end this was a good read that had a number of twists turns, and guessing that kept my interests up and kept me reading it. I finished it in two days. Nice job on the content of story. They limited to needed information and not all the many descriptions of the land, the home, the weather, etc. Nice job, I would highly recommend this book.
Reviewer: william a
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