
The Girl in the Glass
A McCabe and Savage Thriller, Book 4
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Narrated by:
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Stephen Mendel
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By:
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James Hayman
Two identical women. Two identical murders. Two lives brutally cut short 108 years apart.
June 1904.
Aimée Garnier Whitby, a beautiful French artist and wife of one of Maine's richest and most powerful men, is found near death on the Whitby family's private summer island, the letter "A" mysteriously carved into her chest.
June 2012.
Veronica Aimée Whitby, the 18-year-old descendant and virtual double of the first Aimée, becomes the victim of a near perfect copycat murder. With another beautiful, promising young Whitby woman slain, the media begin to swarm and pressure builds for Mike McCabe and Maggie Savage to bring the killer quickly to justice. But the key to solving Aimée's death just might have been buried with her beautiful ancestor.
The latest McCabe and Savage thriller from USA Today best-selling author James Hayman is a crackling, twisty novel of suspense, perfect for fans of J.A. Jance and John Sandford.
©2015 James Hayman (P)2015 HarperCollins PublishersListeners also enjoyed...




















Good book, interesting and easygoing
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Very good clear to the end.
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Story....ok - Narrator...not ok
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Liked. Clever plots, no explicit sex, no offensive language. These are murder mysteries, and some scenes are a bit grizzly but nothing gratuitous. There are five novels as of this writing, giving a nice long listen of nearly 50 hours. But, each book has a beginning-middle-end. Start with The Cutting for character continuity.
Not so hot. Narration is a bit stilted and unnatural, but listenable. No trouble discerning who is speaking to whom. Bumped the speed to 1.5.
Written by James Hayman and narrated by Stephen Mendel. All novels in the area of 10 hours of listening in unabridged audiobook format, released from 2015 through 2017 by HarperAudio.
McCabe and Savage Thrillers
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A Total Letdown
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Well done!
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Good Murder Mystery!
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Would you recommend this book to a friend? Why or why not?
No. I absolutely love James Hayman's books. The McCabe & Savage series has been awesome but this book was a total let down. There was just too much historical data regarding the going on's in the 1920's. They could have developed more "real time" content and character development. The book was just not what I thought it was going to be. I was so let down.What was the most interesting aspect of this story? The least interesting?
The story had so much potential but for me it just fell very flat in comparison to the other books in this series. I am sadly disappointed with this book. The book was flat for the first 8 hours but then in the last hour of the book it seemed like there was "HOPE" for it to come alive and end well but... again... fell very flat for me.Which scene was your favorite?
The best scene in the book is the one of Lucy withdrawing the $400 from the ATM! I couldn't help be rooting for her even though she was stealing money from a dead girl.Do you think The Girl in the Glass needs a follow-up book? Why or why not?
No. The book was just... well... dumb. It was not nearly as good as the other books. Too much historical data regarding stuff that happened in the early 1900's. It seemed irrelevant. Less time could have been spent on that historical data and spent developing a better story line/killer.Any additional comments?
I was not happy with this book but... I absolutely LOVE James Hayman as a writer. I am excited to see what adventure awaits McCabe & Savage next. I really wish their relationship would flourish!Too much Historical Data - Very Slow moving...
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James Hayman is more an expert engineer than an artist. He constructs plots the way Lear builds jets. It’s a miracle that so many tons of density can fly through the air… But engineers aren’t artists, or wizards. They put together the parts so that their creations don’t, um, land… spontaneously. Y’know?
I like the way Haymam and Stephen Mendel make me like Maine, and the people who swirl around Portland police detectives. Detectives who incidentally generally like and support one another as a team. Hayman, unlike a lot of mystery authors apparently doesn’t think they’re inept clowns riven by Peter-Principle promotions where only dung rises politically to the top.
And this time Hayman takes some clever risks as a writer, swirling together twin murders committed over a century apart. And it works. This jet flies!
Warning though, start the series with “The Cutting” and work your way here. Me? I’ll pre-order the next in this series as soon as the team records it.
Good. Quite Good... But, be warned...
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Just ok
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