Member Reviews
Paige Shelton's Wild Alaska series is one of my favorites, so I was excited to read this latest entry. This entry finally provides answers to the long standing issue of the man who abducted Beth the year before. I look forward to how the series and Beth move forward after this.
Perfect Storm is the sixth installment in Paige Shelton’s Alaska Wild series featuring mystery writer Beth Rivers not so secretly hiding out in Benedict Alaska. With the threat of Beth’s kidnapper having escaped custody and leaving everyone in Benedict on high alert, Beth feels guilty about putting those she cares about in harms way and decides to remove herself from the equation. Loaded down with gear, Beth and Tex set out remote camping but come across one of the individuals from the nearby mining community carrying a body on the back of a horse claiming murder.
When the story doesn’t quite match up to what appears to have happened, there’s another mysterious individual and an apparent Bigfoot, it becomes all hands on deck to keep Beth safe while also figuring out what actually is happening.
A lot of personal resolutions for Beth in this story revolving around her parents as well as a resolute resolve to stay in Benedict and truly make this her home. I liked the conclusion to the long standing threat being resolved and that there wasn’t a clear answer to the mine mystery. I know that might not be a popular opinion cause it’s nice when things are wrapped up neatly in little bows but sometimes they can’t be and that’s life. I’m interested to see what’s in store next for Beth and the residents of Benedict.
Thank you @minotaurbooks and @netgalley for this eARC in exchange for my honest feedback
This Alaska-based series is a captivating blend of suspense, murder, mystery, and unexpected twists. The setting enhances the suspense, making it an even more thrilling read. I thoroughly enjoyed it and eagerly anticipate the next installment in the series!
Beth Rivers needs to disappear. Her one time kidnapper, Travis, is on his way to her town in Alaska, and she's losing time to get out quickly!
Good book! This book had suspense, intrigue, murder, mystery, a decent who done it and a few crazy twist and turn! The story was interesting! It’s worth reading but was just ok for me! Thank you NetGalley and the publisher for sharing this book with me!
While NetGalley was kind enough to provide me with an electronic copy of Paige Shelton’s latest Alaska adventure, the opinion is my own. Beth Rivers has been in small town Benedict for a year and has fallen in love with the town and people. All is going well when she takes a call from the detective who arrested her kidnapper, Travis Walker. Walker has escaped shortly after threatening to find and kill Beth. So, her friends, who have become more of a family than her own parents, offer to protect her by basically surrounding her. The group decides that Beth and her boyfriend Tex should go camping in the wilderness where they are sure Walker will never find them. On their way to a cabin deep in the woods, they encounters a problem at a mining camp that sends them back to Benedict. The storyline stays taut and moves fast toward a climax that leaves the reader breathless and a bit exhausted from the trip. Well done and enjoyable book.
Thanks to NetGalley and S. Martin's Press for the opportunity to read Perfect Storm by Paige Shelton. This series based in Alaska is one of my favorite series being written right now. Alaska fascinates me and Ms. Shelton does an excellent job bringing it and the characters to life
Are you ready for a terrifying read said in the Alaskan wilderness? If so, Perfect Storm should be on your list. I thoroughly enjoyed this book.
Book six in Paige Shelton's Wild Alaska series. It's my favorite of her fives series but in all honesty this one was not my favorite. I liked the characters in this series and I love the setting (even though I'm not at all convinced that it is even close to being realistic), but I didn't love the plot of this one. It did have plenty of action, and provided closure to the long standing issue of the man who had abducted her the year before escaping custody and coming after her, the parallel mystery of people being killed in a remote mining community literally did not get solved at all. And I confess I got kind of irritated by how very central the main character appeared to be to absolutely every other character. I started to find her kind of self-absorbed. Anyway, I'll probably still read the next in the series but I did find this one somewhat disappointing.