Deadly Obsession Audiobook By John C. Dalglish cover art

Deadly Obsession

Detective Jason Strong Series, Book 13

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Deadly Obsession

By: John C. Dalglish
Narrated by: James Killavey
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About this listen

Without any apparent motive, a suburban mother is murdered within steps of her front door.

Events will conspire to push Jason and Vanessa's partnership like never before. Lives are lost and futures changed in a mystery that won't come together.

In a case that could turn into the biggest failure of their careers, the detectives must find a way to stop a Deadly Obsession.

©2016 John Dalglish (P)2016 John Dalglish
Fiction Police Procedural Thriller & Suspense Mystery
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What listeners say about Deadly Obsession

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

An engaging, fast-paced, short mystery novel

This is a fast-paced, short novel, just over four hours. A suburban housewife is murdered on the steps of her front door, and investigation shows no apparent motive. When her son is shot in front of the home a few days later, Jason Strong and Vanessa Lane have new questions to ask, starting in some seemingly unlikely places.

There's a strong story here, and good characters. Both male and female characters are well handled. It's enough to make me believe Dalglish is young enough to have grown up in a world where the personhood of female people is just assumed! (Hey, sorry, but it's a nice change to have seen happen over the course of my lifetime.)

Sadly, this makes it extra noticeable that the narrator, while not bad, does not serve the writing here especially well. He reads all the male parts in a very strong, manly voice. No, that doesn't really convey it. The narrator reads the male parts in A Strong, MANLY Voice! It's mildly annoying, though after the start, it never kicked me out of the story.

The audiobook is still well worth listening to. It may be even easier to lose yourself in the print edition, though.

In an overall enjoyable book, I do have one criticism for Mr. Dalglish, though. Jason and Vanessa discover that the possible villain has posted to Facebook from two public library branches. They visit the two branches, where library staff hand over the required user information--on everyone using the internet from the library in the relevant timeframes, not even information on one particular user--without even asking why, much less asking for a warrant.

Librarians are professionals. We have professional and ethical standards, and your library information is private and protected. The government and its agents don't get to waltz in and browse through it, any more than they can get your phone data or the IP address from which you posted to Facebook without a warrant. The Facebook example isn't random; it's a point explicitly made in the story that not only do they need a warrant to get the Facebook info, but the warrant needs to be as narrow as possible. And Facebook is run by geeks and business people, not by members of a profession for whom freedom of access to information is a core belief. That means that no, Mr. Dalglish, we do not hand over to police information on what library users are reading or when they access the internet on library computers, or what they look at when they do, unless they have a warrant for that information.

And the police in this story had the information they needed to get that warrant. It wasn't even "for the plot," but just because Mr. Dalglish, like so many others, thinks we are file clerks and baby sitters, not professionals with professional standards and professional ethics.

This made me angry, and I'm sorry about that. This really is an enjoyable book. But that doesn't make it okay for a writer to take the time to get it right about what Facebook needs to hand over your information, and then utterly disregard that for the people who are actually educated in saying no to police officers who might just want to go on a fishing expedition. Our professional standards forbid cooperating with that, and in many states that non-cooperation without a warrant is also the law. Maybe not in Texas. But even in Texas, librarians are still professionals, with professional standards and professional ethics.

Recommended anyway.

I received a free copy of this audiobook from the author.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Emotionally charged murder mystery

This was a very enjoyable murder mystery that kept my attention from start to finish. It is the first Jason Strong audiobook I have listened to and I will look forward to hearing more of them. The story is a stand alone but there are common threads apparent that must run through the other novels. These threads do not distract from the story as the authors writing makes them easy to pick up and understand. The emotion, fear and affection surrounding John Patton is illustrated well by both the writing and the narration. The narrator did a good job of both male and female characters, giving each individual personalities and voices. It is a well written and narrated audiobook, with a fast paced, emotionally charged story that highlights the risks that today's youth can encounter. I received the audiobook in exchange for my honest opinion.

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    4 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars
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Very enjoyable

If you could sum up Deadly Obsession in three words, what would they be?

good cop story

What did you like best about this story?

The easy relationship of the two detectives

What do you think the narrator could have done better?

I found the narrator to sound like a radio announcer, so that was a bit of a disappointment, but it didn't take away from the enjoyment of the book

Did you have an extreme reaction to this book? Did it make you laugh or cry?

Not an extreme reaction, but I did find myself rooting for the detectives.

Any additional comments?

Looking forward to reading more

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