Exit Wounds

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Abridged
Author: J.A. Jance
Narrator: Debra Monk
Genres: Fiction, Mystery, Thriller
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Date: August 2003
Length: 6 hours
Ratings:
  • Book Rating: 2.5/5
Formats:
  • CD
  • WMA

Overview

A woman is lying dead in the stillness of an airless trailer. Why someone would murder the homeless loner is only one of the questions nagging at the police. Why did the killer use an 85 year old bullet, fired from the gun used in the brutal murder of 2 other women? The slayings are as oppresive as the 100 degree heat for Sheriff Joanna Brady in Cochise County, Arizona. She must put martial distractions & an opponents dirty tricks aside to deal with the case that threatens everyone in her jurisdiction. Now there is a serial killer in their midst. Fear, hatred, & evil at the core of one families history come to a boil beneath the merciless Arizona sun.

Reviews (2)

exit wounds

Written by jo Alexander from San Saba, TX on May 5th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 5/5

Good, Book, I really enjoyed listening to it. Narrator was very good

Exit Wounds

Written by Anonymous on September 17th, 2004

  • Book Rating: 1/5

Slow and predictable. Author should spend as much time on the actual mystery part of the book as was spent on the personal life of the main character.

Author Details

Author Details

Jance, J.A.

Considering J. A. Jance's now impressive career -- which includes two massively popular mystery series and status as a New York Times bestseller -- it may be difficult to believe that she was initially strongly discouraged from literary pursuits. A chauvinistic creative writing professor advised her to seek out a more "ladylike" job, such as nurse or schoolteacher. Moreover, her alcoholic husband (a failed Faulkner wannabe) assured her there was room in the family for only one writer, and he was it. Determined to make her doomed marriage work, Jance put her writing on the back burner. But while her husband slept, she penned the visceral poems that would eventually be collected in After the Fire.

Jance next chose to use her hard times in a more unlikely manner. Encouraged by an editor to try writing fiction after a failed attempt at a true-crime book, she created J. P. Beaumont, a homicide detective with a taste for booze. Beaumont's drinking problem was clearly linked to Jance's dreadful experiences with her first husband; but, as she explains it: "Beaumont was smart enough to sober up, once the problem was brought to his attention. My husband, on the other hand, died of chronic alcoholism at age 42." So, from misfortune grew one of the most popular characters in modern mystery fiction. Beaumont debuted in 1985's Until Proven Guilty -- and, after years of postponing her writing career, Jance was on her way.

As a sort of light flipside to the dark Beaumont, Jance created her second series in 1991. Inspired by the writer's happier role as a mom, plucky small-town sheriff Joanna Brady was introduced in Desert Heat and struck an immediate chord with readers. In 2005, Jance added a third story sequence to her repertoire with Edge of Evil, featuring Ali Reynolds, a former TV reporter-turned-professional blogger.

And so, the adventures continue! A career such as Jance's would be extraordinary under any circumstances, but considering the obstacles she overcame to become a bestselling, critically acclaimed novelist, her tale is all the more compelling. As she explains it: "One of the wonderful things about being a writer is that everything -- even the bad stuff -- is usable."