2nd Chance (novel)
First edition.
The Transamerica Pyramid pictured
AuthorJames Patterson with Andrew Gross
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SeriesWomen's Murder Club
GenreCrime novel
Published2003 (Little, Brown)
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)
Pages432 pp
ISBN0-446-61279-0
OCLC51507481
Preceded by1st to Die 
Followed by3rd Degree 

2nd Chance is the second novel in the Women's Murder Club series written by James Patterson with Andrew Gross. It is the sequel to 1st to Die.

Plot summary

Homicide Lieutenant Lindsay Boxer is still recovering from the recent loss of her partner and is just returning to the force when she is called in to investigate a series of murders that include an 11-year-old girl and an elderly woman. Through her investigations she discovers a connection to a jail-hate gang called Chimera. After another police officer is killed by a sniper and then her boss is murdered, the trail leads to the ex-cop Frank Coombs. To further complicate all of the Women's Murder Club ladies, Jill is pregnant and Claire becomes a target for the Chimera killer. Cindy starts dating the murdered girl's pastor, Aaron Winslow, and Lindsay's father shows up, pretending he misses his daughter, but actually following Chimera, too, as he was present the day the killer slaughtered a 14-year-old boy. Finally, after chasing the trail of Frank Coombs, Lindsay trails the real killer, Rusty Coombs - Frank's son - to a tower on a college campus where he has opened fire and killed several students. Rusty is getting revenge for what has happened to his father and no longer cares if he lives or dies. Lindsay kills Rusty at the college tower. As an epilogue, Lindsay receives a postcard from her father in Mexico saying sorry for lying to her about his crooked past and telling her he has bought a boat and named it Buttercup, his pet name for her.

Reception

Publishers Weekly said 2nd Chance was Patterson's most interesting book since When the Wind Blows.[1]

References

  1. Zaleski, Jeff (18 February 2002). "2nd Chance (book)". Publishers Weekly. Vol. 249, no. 7. pp. 75–76.


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