Publisher: Brilliance Audio; Abridged edition
ISBN: 1480598992
Language: English
Formats: Kindle,Hardcover,Paperback,Audible, Unabridged,Audio CD, Audiobook, CD, Unabridged,
Category: Books,Mystery, Thriller & Suspense,Thrillers & Suspense, FREE Shipping,
#1 New York Times Bestselling author Tami Hoag returns to the bestselling series of her career with a Kovac and Liska case that will delight fans and new listeners alike.
A murder from the past. A murder from the present. And a life that was never meant to be.…
As the dreary, bitter weather of late fall descends on Minneapolis, Detective Nikki Liska is restless. After moving to the cold case squad in order to spend more time with her sons, she misses the rush of pulling an all-nighter, the sense of urgency of hunting a murderer on the loose. Most of all she misses her old partner, Sam Kovac. Sam is having an even harder time adjusting to Nikki's absence, saddled with a green new partner younger than pieces of Sam's wardrobe. Sam is distracted from his troubles by an especially brutal double homicide: a middle-aged husband and wife bludgeoned and hacked to death in their home with a ceremonial Japanese samurai sword. Nikki's case, the unsolved murder of a family man, community leader, and decorated sex crimes detective for the Minneapolis PD, is less of a distraction: twenty years later, there is little hope for finding the killer who got away.
On the other end of the spectrum, Minneapolis resident Evi Burke has a life she only dreamed of as a kid in and out of foster homes: a beautiful home, a family, people who love her, a fulfilling job. Little does she know that a danger from her past is stalking her perfect present. A danger powerful enough to pull in both Kovac and Liska and destroy the perfect life she was never meant to have.
#1 New York Times Bestselling author Tami Hoag returns to the bestselling series of her career with a Kovac and Liska case that will delight fans and new listeners alike.
A murder from the past. A murder from the present. And a life that was never meant to be.…
As the dreary, bitter weather of late fall descends on Minneapolis, Detective Nikki Liska is restless. After moving to the cold case squad in order to spend more time with her sons, she misses the rush of pulling an all-nighter, the sense of urgency of hunting a murderer on the loose. Most of all she misses her old partner, Sam Kovac. Sam is having an even harder time adjusting to Nikki's absence, saddled with a green new partner younger than pieces of Sam's wardrobe. Sam is distracted from his troubles by an especially brutal double homicide: a middle-aged husband and wife bludgeoned and hacked to death in their home with a ceremonial Japanese samurai sword. Nikki's case, the unsolved murder of a family man, community leader, and decorated sex crimes detective for the Minneapolis PD, is less of a distraction: twenty years later, there is little hope for finding the killer who got away.
On the other end of the spectrum, Minneapolis resident Evi Burke has a life she only dreamed of as a kid in and out of foster homes: a beautiful home, a family, people who love her, a fulfilling job. Little does she know that a danger from her past is stalking her perfect present. A danger powerful enough to pull in both Kovac and Liska and destroy the perfect life she was never meant to have.
The Bitter Season
In Tami Hoag’s “The Bitter Season,” we observe the misery of people who have been abused and/or have inflicted abuse on others. Among Hoag’s troubled characters are the vindictive Diana Chamberlain, a promising graduate student who loathes her spiteful father; Evi Burke, a social worker with a gorgeous and saintly spouse and appalling memories of her torturous past; Ted’s daughter, Jennifer, a sensitive and fragile woman; and Donald Nilson, a bigoted loudmouth who was Ted Duffy's nasty neighbor. Nikki slowly makes headway on her case, but is stymied by the stubborn refusal of key witnesses to reveal their secrets.
The gruff, hard-nosed, and blunt Kovac is a veteran cop who is knowledgeable, dedicated, and persistent. Nikki, ably assisted by Candra Seley, is tough and determined. Although she adores her kids, she does not allow the demands of motherhood to keep her from putting in long hours to track down Duffy’s executioner.
There are plenty of suspects: a wife who married Duffy’s brother, a daughter who took years to recover some type of sanity after her father’s death, and two foster children who were returned to the system after Duffy’s death.
Sam, on the other hand, has been given the task of investigating the brutally horrific murder of a professor at the University of Minnesota and his wife. The professor and his daughter are not on good terms, as he is vying for a promotion in the East Asian Studies Department, and his daughter has compromised his eligibility by submitting a complaint against him with that same department in which she also works. The two children of these parents have little love apparent and are suspect as well.
Liska and Kovac are a mismatched pair who have worked together successfully as partners on the Minneapolis police force for a number of years. Liska’s ex-husband, also a cop, appears to have the emotional maturity of a seventeen-year-old himself, leaving Liska to raise the boys with little support.
To replace Liska, Kovac has acquired a promising young rookie as his partner, a former MP. “He didn’t want a new partner. He was too old and cranky to break one in.” And as the story unfolds, Kovac proves himself right.
Meanwhile, the force is abuzz with the creation of a new cold case unit, and Liska has opted to join it in hopes she can avoid round-the-clock investigations and spend more time with her two teenage sons. However, against her will she is assigned to a quarter-century-old case that she believes to be unsolvable. And, as luck would have it, the investigation requires far longer hours than she’d hoped.
“It’s cold in Minneapolis”
This being fiction, and genre fiction at that, you won’t be surprised to learn that eventually the two cases prove to be related. But the path from here to there is full of surprises.
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The Bitter Season
Kovac and Liska take on multiple twisted cases as #1 New York Times bestselling author Tami Hoag explores a murder from the past, a murder from the present, and a life that was never meant to be.
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The Bitter Season
... Sato could never trump, but still, he wanted his sleep. He wanted to look as confident as he felt. Maybe if he closed all the doors between the stairs and the study, the sound would be muffled enough not to bother him. The Bitter Season 43.
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A Bittersweet Season
In telling the story of her own struggle to learn how to care for her aging and ailing mother, a journalist offers helpful insights and advice to other caregivers who feel overwhelmed. Reprint.
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Dust to Dust
A killer who will stop at absolutely nothing to keep a dark and shattering secret . . . From the Paperback edition.
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Every Bitter Thing Is Sweet
Every Bitter Thing Is Sweet by Sara Hagerty is the story of a woman whose life expectations went unmet while her heart became re-acquainted with her first Love.
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Find Her
When Flora herself disappears, D.D. realizes a far more sinister predator is out there. One who’s determined that this time, Flora Dane will never escape. And now it is all up to D. D. Warren to find her.
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Bitter Blood
For years, the human and vampire residents of Morganville, Texas, have managed to co-exist in peace.
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Down the Darkest Road
Once upon a time I had the perfect family.
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Bee Season
The work of a lyrical and gifted storyteller, Bee Season marks the arrival of an extraordinarily talented new writer. From the Trade Paperback edition.
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Guilty as Sin
Praise for Tami Hoag and Guilty as Sin “Without a doubt . . . one of the most intense suspense writers around.” Chicago Tribune “A chilling study of evil that holds the reader until the shocking surprise ending.” New York Times ...
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The Men of Bitter Creek
From New York Times bestselling author and romance legend Joan Johnston come two favourite stories about true love and family, available together for the first time.
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Dragonfly in Amber
From the Trade Paperback edition.
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Alert
"This is not a test"--every New Yorker's worst nightmare is about to become a reality.
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Wildest Heart
Rosemary Rogers. Part V: The Bitter Season a Thirty T he storm died, hissing and grumbling into Part V:The Bitter Season.
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Punch, Volumes 54-55
But thrust the hard and heaped-up stones and stinging growths aside, And made way for those parted rills henceforth in one to glide : So letting warm attemper cold, and bitter season sweet, That the waters mixed were cordial, whereof each ...
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Hand-book of American literature, historical, biographical, and critical [by J. Gostwick. The title-leaf is a cancel].
the act of the Lord Jesus, sounding forth in mo the blast which shall in his own holy season cast down the strength and ... tost in a bitter season, not knowing what bread or bed did mean,' and sometimes hiding at night in some hollow tree.
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Eclectic Magazine: Foreign Literature, Volume 55; Volume 118
In that early time the jovial season was one of unstinted eating and drinking, of enormous extravagance redeemed in some measure by the fact that the poor were made glad by ... the bitter season “ Wherein our Saviour's birth is celebrate.
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The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, Volume 55
In that early time the jovial season was one of unstinted eating and drinking, of enormous extravagance redeemed in some measure by the fact that the poor were made glad ... the bitter season " Wherein onr Saviour's birth is celebrate.
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Episodes of Insect Life
In so doing, it forms a capacious cavity, which, after lining with a silken web, it appropriates as its dormitory through the bitter season. And a secure asylum does the little slumberer possess ! The burr of his occupation may be shaken ...
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The Eclectic Review, Volume 3; Volume 111
I am forced now, however, „ to seek other pleasures in the bitter season ; and, sooth to say, old December wears a jolly heart enough beneath his icy coat. Pluck up a single ivy leaf from the old wall, see what a jeweller he is. How the dark ...
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