The Wedding Crasher: A Sam Tate Mystery
On a beautiful April day, the seasons suspended between spring and summer, a woman in a bridal gown lies under a stand of oak trees, throat slit, ring finger missing. She's the latest victim of the Wedding Crasher, a meticulous murderer who's killed five women across three states without leaving a clue. The last two bodies were found in Pickett County, Tennessee.
Sam Tate is Pickett County's new sheriff. A former Nashville homicide detective, she struggles with her inner demons and the nightmares born of a horrific childhood trauma. Respected but closely guarded, Sam has colleagues but no real friends. Even after she assembles a multi-agency team to hunt down the Wedding Crasher, her impulse is to go it alone. To further confound matters, she's attracted to her case partner, FBI Special Agent Terry Sloan, even though she isn't sure she trusts him.
Another body is discovered, in circumstances that closely resemble but don't exactly match the earlier homicides. Is a second predator at work in Pickett County? Is the serial killer working with an acolyte? Why is Sam suddenly a target? And how can she stop the Wedding Crasher before another bride-to-be dies?
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Become an affiliate"Stern weaves a suspenseful and intriguing story, and surprising revelations will keep readers guessing about the murderer's identity. An absorbing and surprising mystery tale." Kirkus Reviews
"Nikki Stern's The Wedding Crasher possesses the claustrophobic menace that makes small-town crime so terrifying, with an ending you won't forget. In Sam Tate she's created a bona fide 21st century heroine with a wound as big as the city she left behind and a heart as genuine as the town she's come to protect." David Corbett, award-winning author of The Long-Lost Love Letters of Doc Holliday
"The Wedding Crasher satisfies because it manages to be both nuanced and suspenseful. It lingers on the palate like a fine, full-bodied wine, long after the story reaches its startling conclusion." D. Donovan, Sn Reviewer, Midwest Book Review