Daughter of the Game by Tracy Grant
For a historical mystery story, the romance is the most memorable aspect of it.

For a historical mystery story, the romance is the most memorable aspect of it.

There’s danger! A psycho on the prowl! But hey, who cares, let’s just mope and whine!

It’s a fun and crazy spoof with an adorable villain (ahem), but shame about the boggy last third or so.

Same old song and dance – bring on the gimmicks and idiot heroines!

The heroine is a moron. Case closed.

Mommy, the agents are still bickering! Make them stop!

Meet the dumbest secret agent ever. Yes, she’s the heroine. How did you guess?

Hackneyed, predictable, and as bonus, the hero is scum and the heroine is hopelessly weak.

This is yet another serial killer thing, although the author’s style is always reliably entertaining.

Yet another PSA to remind us all that our fellow women are all jealous whores out to steal our man.
