By Sparkle Hayter
Book One in the Robin Hudson series
Robin Hudson works in the news department of a large New York network. So far, her career and life have been less than stellar. Her work life due to a couple of embarrassing incidents on camera and her personal life due to her soon-to-be ex-husband's infidelity.
New Year's Eve and Robin gets a phone call from an unknown person who reveals that he knows a lot of intimate details about her life, including Red Knobby. He instructs her to meet him at the networks New Year's Eve party that night if she wants to know more.
She was thinking she wouldn't go before she got the phone call because she was concerned her cheating spouse would be there with his new lover, who also works of the same network. But curiosity about this mysterious call makes her change her mind.
Once there, she has to witness the painful scene of watching the hubby and his jezebel canoodling on the dance floor. Plus the false and the sincere sympathy she has to endure from coworkers at the party. Finally, she is passed a note instructing her to go to a room in the hotel at exactly 11 PM. Meanwhile, the reader gets to meet the cast of hundreds that fill the novel. So many characters and so many introductions.
Anyway, Robin does as instructed and knocks on the door and no one answers. She waits a decent amount of time, but no one shows up and no one ever answers. She only encounters one other person, one of her coworkers in the hallway where the room is located.
Naturally, the guy she was supposed to meet is dead in the hotel room and naturally Robin is the prime suspect. We know she didn't do it and it doesn't take much talking on her part to convince the police that she is an unlikely suspect. So being a reporter and having her freedom on the line, she does a little investigating of her own. It doesn't take her long to discover that she was not the only target of the dead man, Jerry Spurdle, a P.I. with a nasty reputation. A few other women at the network have also been blackmailed by him and certainly had reason to want him dead. Did they have the time and the opportunity though, while attending a New Year's party, to beat his head in until he was very much dead?
This was an OK read. Too many characters to keep track of though. I also didn't find the plot that engaging. Or the main characters that interesting.
Here are reviews by Kirkus Reviews and Publishers Weekly.
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