I See You

A cold case heats up in this gritty, suspenseful thriller from New York Times bestselling author Mary Burton.
FBI special agent Zoe Spencer uses skeletal remains to recreate the faces of murder victims through sculpture. Though highly scientific, the process is also sensitive and intimate; she becomes attached to the individuals she identifies, desperate to find justice for each.
As Zoe examines old remains, she sees a teenage girl looking back at her--the victim in a cold case from over a decade ago. Zoe wants nothing more than to tell this young woman's story and to bring her killer to justice.
Zoe's case leads her to the victim's hometown and to homicide detective William Vaughan, Zoe's on-again, off-again lover. As the two become more involved in the case, they quickly realize that it isn't as cold as they first believed: someone's still out there hunting women. And with more women gone missing, time's running out. Can they work together and stop this madman before he kills again?
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Community Reviews
The forensics in this book was cringe-worthy. The trope of using a pen to pick up crime scene evidence is used more than once in this. The characters lacked chemistry but there were two sex scenes for some reason? I wish I'd know this was less a profiler novel from a prolific author and more a housewife thriller. I hate leaving mean reviews, but this was painful to read. The plot idea was good but it was all so terribly written. Perhaps if this book were twice as long it'd have been better, but there's still no excusing using the pen trope. If you've read good crime, skip this one.
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