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These Adventures Are Not 'Set in Stone' - Book Review - A Nest in the Rocks

These Adventures Are Not ‘Set in Stone’ – Book Review

The fourth installment in The True Lies of Rembrandt Stone – called Set in Stone – releases tomorrow! Here’s what it’s about:

Thirty-eight women. Dead. All the in the past. All because Detective Rembrandt Stone played with fate, and somewhere in time unleashed a serial killer. He can’t undo their deaths, not anymore, but the serial killer is still at large, twenty-four years later, and now it’s personal. Especially when the evidence points to the last person on anyone’s radar: Rembrandt himself.
Now he’ll have to use the clues from his pasts to track down the killer in the present.

But the killer is onto him and puts the one person Rembrandt loves in his cross hairs. Now, Rembrandt must outwit time to save the people he loves.

Because time is playing for keeps.

Read on to find out why you should read Set in Stone now.

Every book in the Rembrandt Stone series gets better than the one before it! Set in Stone is so faced paced it’ll make you dizzy. The twists and turns will keep you guessing – and on the edge of your seat. I absolutely devoured this book; I couldn’t put it down!

Of course, I do love time travel novels, and since this is the fourth one in the series, the time hopping has the potential to get confusing; but the authors handle this with aplomb. When Rem’s travels create changes in the story, Rem’s inner monologue walks you through it clearly and smoothly, without disrupting the plot. I appreciate this assistance in keeping all the timelines distinct, and it also adds to the drama – it ups the reader’s emotional involvement in Rem’s problematic situation.

The authors are not only smooth in plot creation but also in word choice. So very much of the story is quotable that my digital copy has ended up very colorful from where I highlighted over and over. I love when a story is not only action-packed, but also beautiful in language.

I love these quotes from Set in Stone.

I also love that as the stakes spiral ever higher in Rem’s drama, so do his big questions and inner transformation. He starts to ask tough questions of a new variety in this one, and I like the way that the series seems to be going.

Of course, I can’t wait for the next installment so I can see if I’m right. If only I didn’t have to wait so long …

I received a complimentary copy of this book from the authors. All opinions are my own.

Click on the titles below to read my reviews of the other books in this series:

Cast the First Stone

No Unturned Stone

Sticks and Stone

What are your thoughts?

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