On the family’s Brazos River Ranch in Texas, Avery Elliott helps run her grandfather’s commercial construction business. Raised by Senator Elliott, Avery has never doubted her grandfather is the man of integrity and faith she’s always believed him to be . . . until the day she finds him standing with a gun over the body of a dead man. To make matters worse, Avery’s just discovered a billing discrepancy for materials supposedly purchased for construction of the Lago de Cobre Dam.
Desperate for answers, Avery contacts FBI Special Agent Marc Wilkins for help. As Marc works to identify the dead man Avery saw, threats toward Avery create a fresh sense of urgency to pinpoint why someone wants to silence her. With a hurricane approaching the Texas coast and the structural integrity of the Lago de Cobre Dam called into question, time is running out to get to the bottom of a sinister plot that could be endangering the lives of not only Avery and her loved ones but the entire community.
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Sexual Content - 0/5
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Violence - 0/5
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Language - 0/5
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Drugs and Alcohol - 0/5
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Summary
Concrete Evidence by DiAnn Mills is a romantic suspense stand alone novel. The suspense had several suspects and some plot twists thrown in.
Avery was raised by her grandfather who was a Senator. She is not my favorite character. She seemed to make several stupid decisions and frustrated me.
I liked FBI special agent Marc and Roden. The romance between Avery and Marc just didn’t flow very well.
There was plenty of action; we start with a dead body on the ranch but it will not be the only one. We find out if Marc’s dad really died of a heart attack. And Avery barely survives a bomb.
The book is well written and DiAnn is a great author. I just struggled connecting with Avery and the romance in this one. If it is your first book by DiAnn make sure you give her other books a read.
I received this book from Netgalley. I was not required to write a positive review.
You can see my full review at More Than a Review dot com where I rate the level of sex, violence, language and drug/alcohol use in books.