Sunday, June 15, 2025

7th Heaven by James Patterson and Maxine Paetro

I was in the mood for a little murder and mayhem (as one is, from time to time), and 7th Heaven was next up in the Women’s Murder Club series—so it was an easy choice. Right from page one, the book delivers: a home invasion, a murder, and arson all rolled into one. I didn’t even have time to catch my breath, which, honestly, was exactly what I needed.

There are two major cases in this book. One involves a series of arson murders, and the other a missing teenager with a court trial that had me rolling my eyes. While I appreciated the twist—a whole trial for someone who turns out to be not dead—my jaw hit the floor in disbelief. I didn’t see it coming, but I also didn’t totally buy it. No body, no DNA, no murder weapon… and yet they pushed forward with a murder charge? I don’t know which DA office that came from, but they’ve got some explaining to do.

The arson case, on the other hand, was gripping. Creepy, senseless, and devastating—classic Patterson villains at work. And once again, Lindsay holds everything together. She’s my favorite for a reason: smart, flawed, doing an impossible job in a world that doesn’t make it easy. She’s strong and human, and if she were really human, I would admire the heck out of her.

Patterson’s signature short chapters and quick pace kept things moving. I love how the story shifts perspectives without ever feeling disjointed. He doesn’t jump between ten different timelines or go so far back into a character’s childhood that I forget why we’re here in the first place. It’s clean, fast storytelling that I can count on when I need a good jolt of suspense.

That said, while I enjoyed 7th Heaven and tore through it pretty quickly, it’s not one I’d re-read. It gets a solid 4 out of 5 from me. If you’re new to the Women’s Murder Club series, though, maybe start a little earlier—this one hits better when you already know the crew.