Every instinct tells him to run. Every memory tells him he can’t. Special Agent Daniel Stansfield is ready for a change. Burnt out and defeated by the job, it’s his last day with the FBI. But before he can turn in his badge, he’s summoned back to Denver, the city he ran from four years ago, with a chilling message: it's happening again.
Seemingly innocent people are waking up on the side of the highway, with no memory of how they got there, wearing the skin of victims they've allegedly never met. And they each share one haunting detail: a strand of a stranger’s hair is tied around their tongue.
Now Daniel is pulled back into the gruesome cycle, and every clue leads him deeper into the shadows of his own past. He will have to confront the ghosts of his traumatic childhood and face what’s been hunting him all along— before he and the people he loves become the next victims.
Special Agent Daniel Stansfield suffered trauma at a very early age that has shaped the rest of his life. As he is preparing to re-enlist he is pulled back into an unsolved murder case when it appears the unknown serial killer has started again. New victims have turned up, and people are found covered in blood and wearing the skin of these corpses with no memory of what has happened or why they would have been involved.
Pretty freaky right? Well, it would have been if it had been more about the victims and the killer and less about the investigation and the agent's memories and visions. It started off strong, but it turned into more of a slow burn mystery that, for me, never reached its full potential. There are loads of references to The Shining, but that's not enough to back up the claim that it is "Perfect for fans of The Shining and Longlegs." I loved the author's previous book and was hoping to feel the same about this one, but I just can't. It goes off in so many directions that I began to lose interest. You may enjoy it more than I did.
My thanks to Tor Nightfire for the advance paperback.



