For me, 'The Slipper' landed somewhere between classic whodunits and a quieter psychological mystery. The plotting is tidy enough that you can play along without feeling cheated, yet the real strength is in the mood and character detail. I appreciated how the author trusts readers to notice small inconsistencies and to sit with the slow-building tension instead of explaining everything in long expository scenes. There are moments where the narrative lingers on interior thoughts more than on detective work, which will charm readers who like depth over nonstop twists. If your ideal mystery balances human frailty with clever mechanics, this book will sit comfortably on your shelf — I found it both thoughtful and entertaining, a book I mention when friends ask for something that lingers after the last page.
Yes — I'd recommend 'The Slipper' to fans who like mysteries rooted in atmosphere and misdirection. It doesn’t prioritize nonstop action; instead it rewards careful reading and patience. The clues are fair but cleverly hidden among character beats, so part of the pleasure comes from rereading scenes and spotting how the author nudged you along. If you prefer blunt, high-octane thrillers you might find it more restrained, but if you enjoy puzzles that encourage thinking about motive, memory, and perspective, this one is satisfying. I walked away impressed by the craft and pleasantly surprised by the emotional payoff, which made the entire puzzle feel worth the ride.
I tore through 'The Slipper' over a weekend because the author kept folding the mystery in on itself in satisfying ways. The storytelling alternates between quiet domestic scenes and sharp, almost surgical reveals, so the contrast makes every clue hit harder. I loved trying to triangulate the truth while also getting pulled into the characters’ messy personal lives; the moral ambiguity makes guessing motives part of the fun. What really worked for me was how the tone shifts without losing coherence. One chapter can be intimate and conversational, the next clinical and suspicious, and the transitions feel deliberate rather than jarring. That variety kept my attention and kept me reevaluating earlier assumptions. By the last third I was both invested in the emotional resolutions and curious to see the logical tidy-up of the plot. I recommended it to friends who enjoy intelligence and heart in equal measure, and it stuck with me long after.
If you love puzzles that sneak up on you, 'The Slipper' is a delight. I was hooked by the way the book lays down tiny, almost casual details that later snap into place — not by force but by clever design. The mystery unfolds like a set of nested dolls: one revelation opens onto another, and each one reframes the previous scene. Characters aren’t merely vehicles for clues; they’re flawed, sometimes unreliable people whose motives shimmer between sympathy and suspicion. Pacing can feel leisurely at times, which I actually enjoyed because it builds atmosphere and lets the eerie bits breathe. If you prefer breathless chase scenes you might find parts slow, but if you savor red herrings, careful clue-dropping, and an ending that ties emotional stakes to the intellectual puzzle, 'The Slipper' delivers. I closed the book feeling satisfied, curious, and a little haunted — exactly the kind of mix I want from a mystery.
With her enemies in pre-civil war Virginia still seeking her death, Esmerelda is forced to return to the future only days after wedding Lance. Because it was necessary to fake her death in order to stop her enemies from following her to the future, her new husband, Lance, was forced to stay behind. He’d placed a magic box for them to communicate until he found a way to safely be with her beneath the floorboards of the house.
Now, she must find it.
A task that is easier said than done!
“The Magic Box” is book two of the exciting paranormal-romance-mystery-thriller Esmerelda Sleuth Series
Meet Esmerelda Sleuth. Sleuth is her name and investigating is her game. (Paranormal Investigating, that is.)
Esmerelda makes a good living as an investigator in a rather progressive firm. She lives a stable and sensible life until she meets Lance; an old money "hottie" who works for a real estate firm next to her building. After accepting an invitation for a weekend getaway party, she quickly discovers that Lance has a secret. He is wealthy. That part is true. And, yes, he's procured a job as a realtor in the building next door. His secret is that he belongs to an underground society of humans who didn't abandon their connection to magic centuries ago when religion declared it evil and he has traveled through time specifically to find her and bring her back to his time to marry him. If that isn't enough of a far fetched tale to absorb, he informs her that she was born in his time to a family belonging to that same secret society and was promised in marriage to him as an infant. When enemies who didn't want to see the union of families take place made attempts on her life, her parents sent her into the future and erased her memories of them as a precaution.
Possessing virtually no belief in magic, ghosts, psychics, time travel, etc., it takes some doing on Lance's part to convince her to believe his story and go back with him. When she does, the lies, deceit and attempts on her life start all over again. Will she escape emotionally and physically unscathed?
"The Other Side Of the Mirror" is a steamy-paranormal-romance- mystery-thriller and book one of the Esmerelda Sleuth series.
A secret society of widows. A cold billionaire with a deadly past. One woman sent to seduce him... and destroy him.
When Genevieve Holloway buries her husband, she thinks the worst is behind her. But the black-veiled woman at the funeral of her husband says otherwise.
“You’ve been chosen.”
Drawn into a shadowy society of grieving wives turned silent assassins, Genevieve is given one final task before she can walk free: infiltrate the life of Dominic Rourke—the enigmatic tech billionaire tied to her husband’s mysterious death—and expose the truth.
Her mission is clear: seduce him. Infiltrate him. Ruin him.
But Dominic Rourke is nothing like she expected. Cold. Calculating. Unreachable. And he’s never let any woman get close—until her. Worse still, his five-year-old daughter clings to Genevieve like a lost soul, whispering secrets she shouldn’t know. Secrets about her dead mother… and the club Genevieve now serves.
The deeper Genevieve sinks into Dominic’s world, the more dangerous her own becomes. The women she trusted have blood on their hands. The man she was sent to destroy might be innocent. And the lies that bind them all go deeper than any grave.
Genevieve begins to develop feelings for the man she’s sent to ruin, and he sees himself letting go of his cold nature to make her happy and find her husband’s killer.
In a game of power, seduction, and betrayal, only one can survive.
And Genevieve must decide: Is she the hunter or the hunted? Will she be Dominic’s ruin, or will she become his everything?
There are three things Samara Culkin loves: her father, wearing high heels, and being a detective. But in a world where being a female officer is considered weak, she struggles to find a place where she feels truly belong. Determined to prove The Detective Tag firm that she is worth it, she sets out to solve one of the biggest cases the city of Los Angeles has ever seen.
There are three things Clayton Jones likes: his car, detective skills, and the female detective who happens to catch his eye—Samara. As an expert and well-known crime officer, he is given the chance to work with her; a one-time possibility that rarely happens. The only problem is that she hates him. And he does not know why.
The Detective Tag is a crime fiction with a twist of romance. Join Samara and Clayton—all the bitterness, dislikes, and romance in between—as they dive into the world of crime cases and murder investigations.
Well, maybe a bit of finding love, too.
I was on a business trip out of town when I got a text from my neighbor.
[Can you and your husband keep it down? Also, one of your undies fell onto my balcony.]
Shocked, I opened the photo she had sent.
The underwear wasn't even my style, but it matched the one I'd seen in my husband's online shopping cart.
He'd told me it was a gift for me, but I remember noticing the size—it was one size larger than mine.
When confronted with the neighbor's message, my husband swore that the house must've been broken into and claimed the intruder left the item behind.
But something about his story didn't sit right, so I decided to dig further. That was when I stumbled upon his social media.
His latest post was just three words. [I bought this.]
It was paired with a photo of a lingerie gift set.
Beneath it, there was a comment. [I'm wearing it.]
Attached was a picture of a woman's legs—and the unmistakable background of my living room.
The evidence was undeniable.
I packed up the underwear and brought it straight to the police.
"My husband says our house was broken into. This was left behind by the intruder, and it might have DNA on it."
On her unconscious bed, her husband gave the order to abort her child. Their child. Driven by lust and desperation for power, Killian Powell framed Rose Webster just to divorce her and marry her twin. At what price? To easily buy his way into her family's corporation. Rose had the evidence to expose her husband's true face to the world and tear him down. But of what use was it when her vicious parents threatened to stop the treatment of her sick daughter if she dared release the evidence? Like always, they cared more about what they stood to gain from a traitor who stabbed their daughter—a man they once despised when he was nothing. As much as Rose couldn't trade the life of her daughter, she couldn't bear the internet stigma and mockery. Not to mention her job as a detective was suspended as if she were some criminal. The whole world seemed to close in on Rose until redemption came in the form of a dangerous offer. When solving a risky murder case was the only way to get back at her ex-husband and also keep her child safe, how far would she go to ruin her ex?