Ebook {Epub PDF} Improbable Cause by J.A. Jance






















 · Once again, J.A. Jance has reached our her grip, and pulled me into another one of her J.P. Beaumont's adventures as he tries to solve the murder of a dentist in "Improbable Cause." Every nail was hit; every "I" was dotted and "T" crossed.4/5. In Improbable Cause, Jance weaves these characters into the story surrounding a dentist who is a spouse abuser. Why he was killed is plain. Who killed him becomes an investigation of sympathetic characters, none of whom you want to see arrested for the crime/5(5). J. A. Jance. Improbable Cause. Perhaps it was fitting justice: a dentist who enjoyed inflicting pain was murdered in his own chair. The question is not who wanted Dr. Frederick Nielsen dead, but rather who of the many finally reached the breaking point/5().


Improbable Cause. by J. A. Jance. ebook. Read a sample Read a sample Description; Details; Perhaps it was fitting justice: a dentist who enjoyed inflicting pain was murdered in his own chair. The question is not who wanted Dr. Frederick Nielsen dead, but rather who of the many finally reached the breaking point. Improbable Cause. by J a Jance. Be the first to review this item. When a dentist is killed, Detective Beaumont discovers that the victim was a despicable character that society is well off without. And Beaumont soon. BOOK: Improbable Cause by J.A. Jance. After slogging through and then giving up on not one but TWO novels in a row (I only lasted 25 pages into the second one, Katharine Weber's The Triangle, so won't bother reviewing it), I decided I needed something I knew would be entertaining.


The question for Seattle Homicide Detective J. P. Beaumont is not so much who wanted Dr. Frederick Nielson dead, but rather who of the many finally reached the breaking point. There’s something particularly sordid about this investigation and its subsequent revelations of violence, cruelty, infidelity and sexual abuse. Improbable Cause. —. J.A. Jance. The dentist was sitting bolt upright. Mouth opened wide. Stone-cold dead. There was no lack of suspects--the brutalized wife, the pretty, sexually abused dental assistant, an ex-con who was a very intimate friend of the widow. J. A. Jance. Improbable Cause. Perhaps it was fitting justice: a dentist who enjoyed inflicting pain was murdered in his own chair. The question is not who wanted Dr. Frederick Nielsen dead, but rather who of the many finally reached the breaking point.

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