Book Review - The 6th Target
66Women's Murder Club
This is my review ( 5 Stars) for the James Patterson mystery, The 6th Target, a story that to me is "the case of the missing bullet."
I enjoyed this murder mystery very much and have thus far liked it better than I do the TV series that began this season as The Women's Murder Club. I would have liked to have seen Lucy Liu involved.
This is the 6th installment of the popular "Women's Murder Club" cases set in San Francisco. This female club includes Lindsay Boxer, the SFPD detective, Cindy Thomas, the newspaper reporter; Claire Washburn, the Chief Medical Examiner for San Francisco; and Yuki Castellano, the prosecuting attorney formerly of a private practice specializing in white-collar crime defense. When not solving crimes together, the four women share Mexican food at a place called "Susie's."
In "The 6th Target," Lindsay Boxer is going through quite a number of personal changes as she solves several crimes. Her career position is going up and down the ladder, as is her long-distance relationship with fiancé-boyfriend-something Joe. He lives in the Washington D.C. area and is involved with Homeland Security. Lindsay, and he, both have high profile and high stress jobs and are both divorced, with bad leftover baggage. Lindsay also has a new male partner and there is potential for a relationship there as well. In addition to all of this, Lindsay's best friend nearly dies of a gunshot wound. It is all more than Lindsay can stand at times, so there are bittersweet passages and thoughts of regret and missed opportunity throughout the book.
Women's Murder Club
- Chapter excerpt online
Official James Patterson Web Site. - Women's Murder Club - an ABC TV
A movement to bring back the series. - Women's Murder Club
IMDB pages of information on the series.
In this story, on a ferryboat ride in the bay, several people are shot or killed by a potential madman with a gun that he calls "Bucky." One of these individuals is CME Claire Washburn, nicknamed "Butterfly" for her tattoo, and Lindsay's best friend. Claire's second teenage son Edmund was almost shot as well, but escapes when Bucky's 6th round goes wild. He then chases the shooter ashore, to the terror of Lindsay who chases after him in turn. The shooter disappears. Homeless, hearing voices, and later seeing Lindsay on TV asking for clues about the shooter, the lunatic feels she is speaking directly to him, so he turns himself in at her house. The perp is also a perv and the Japanese-Italian Yuki has the chance to prosecute him when her boss in the DA's office has a heart attack over dinner. All through the trial, there is the unasked question of where Bucky's 6th round of ammunition went on the ferryboat. The answer does not appear until the end of the tale; it is serendipity of justice.
Meanwhile, little geniuses are disappearing and their nannies are being murdered. No ransom notes are delivered and no other demands are made except those of mysterious phone calls instructing the parents never to try to find their children again. A series of five-year-old prodigies in music and mathematics are abducted via a twisted scheme of child trafficking through a traveling nanny agency that opens in one city, closes up shop hurriedly, and then reappears in another city across the North American continent with "different" owners. Lindsay and the club solve this set of crimes as well.
The compact chapters in this book moved quickly from scene to scene, allowing me to read the book in short order, with plenty of places to take a quick break as well. I never felt that I had to drag on to the end of an overly long chapter and this was refreshing in itself. The crimes depicted in the book are believable in this day of serial killers and seemingly quiet individuals who suddenly "snap" and destroy people and property around them. The subplot of the disappearing child prodigies was fresh and interesting as well. Both this and the major crime on the ferryboat stemmed from sexual abuse of children, which the major characters like Lindsay Boxer swear to fight until there is no more, and which America needs to more fully prevent. The topic is timely and important. In the context of "The 6th Target," the topic is handled well, without a preponderance of harsh language, and is therefore more thought provoking. The plot and subplots of this book linger with me and I anxiously await the next book in this series. I would recommend this "The 6thTarget" to mystery lovers and fans of police departments, San Francisco, and interesting female characters.
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We don't get the Tv show here in the UK - at least I don't think so - but I'll order the book.









Zsuzsy Bee Level 3 Commenter 4 years ago
I've got them all (I just got the last one for my birthday from my Son).I'm half way through it don't tell me more...
Great HUB
regards Zsuzsy