serial killer fiction
Judgment of Evil by Lori Lowthert
Rebekah had vowed to stop killing for love, but she finds herself unable to stop. Scott still knows nothing about her secret life. She is happily attending graduate school when the unthinkable happens–she is arrested and charged for one of the murders she committed last year. She spends a few nights in jail before she goes in front of a judge, who sets the bail at an exorbitant $1 million. Her father and Scott are able to raise the necessary money and get her out on bail. She kills again, even when she is out on bail. Rebekah has hired an excellent criminal defense attorney, but she’s afraid it won’t be enough and she’ll go back to jail.
Instrument of Evil by Lori Lowthert
Rebekah Johnson has a really big secret, one she’s pretty sure will end her new relationship with Scott. She’d like to tell him, but she anticipates his response would be to break up with her. Or report her to the police. Most likely both. Rebekah is a fledgling serial killer, and she’s not ready to put killing aside. What’s a young serial killer to do? Can she give up killing to save her relationship?
The Serial Killer’s Wife by Robert Swartwood
Five years ago Elizabeth Piccioni’s husband was arrested for being a serial killer. Her life suddenly turned upside down, she did what she thought was best for her newborn baby: she took her son and ran away to start a new life.
Review 262: She’s Not There by Marla Madison
Marla Madison’s debut book can be described by its title, She’s Not There: A Novel of Suspense. Suspense is exactly what the author dishes out.
Lisa Rayburn is a psychologist, in the midst of researching and writing a book on abused women, she becomes concerned about the absence of one of her clients. On further investigating the hiatus in her patient’s treatment, she finds that Jamie Denison has gone missing. Lisa becomes alarmed after looking at the statistics of the number of missing women in the area, and decides to take the information to the police.
