![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() As he becomes more comfortable with his darker side, he discovers even more darkness inside him. I’m not sure if his character actually changed, or if it’s just me, but Jazz’s inner struggles felt less like a distraction from the plot and more like an essential part of the novel. Jazz and I didn’t get on too well in book one, but I liked his POV this time around. Yet I needn’t have worried because Game takes the idea presented in I Hunt Killers and brings it to a new level. I was rather hesitant heading into Game as the moment I picked it up all the things I disliked about I Hunt Killers came flooding back to me. So Jazz and his girlfriend, Connie, hop on a plane to the big city and get swept up in a killer’s murderous game. The Hat-Dog Killer has the Big Apple–and its police force–running scared. And now, when a determined New York City detective comes knocking on Jazz’s door asking for help, he can’t say no. In an effort to prove murder didn’t run in the family, Jazz teamed with the police in the small town of Lobo’s Nod to solve a deadly case. I Hunt Killers introduced the world to Jazz, the son of history’s most infamous serial killer, Billy Dent. ![]()
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