A true crime story, only slightly fictionalized, of catching the Green River serial killer in the Seattle area, the worst serial killer in American history, who killed at least 48 prostitutes, and confessed to each of them, and made those confessions credible with details. It is also a tribute to the author's father, who was the lead detective on the case for almost twenty years on the case. This is gruesome and interesting, especially if you are like me interested in true crime detective stories. I am also reading a lot of father and son stories, and this is in a sense one of those, I'm also coincidentally taking my time rereading Crime and Punishment, so crime stories, all kinds, are just page turners for me.
That said, the art here is just competent and straightforward standard black and white true crime style. The storytelling is good, competent, sort of true to actual casework, plodding, frustrating, not Hollywood. .. though there are dramatic and horrific moments in it. Those details make it hard to read and maybe not recommendable for everyone, but the father tribute part of it, the case study of the detective, is pretty well done.
There's a lot of famous people who write breathless blurbs for the back cover. I liked the book, but agree with almost none of them who find the book riveting. I liked it and if you like true crime stories, you'll like this and find it hard to put down.