Review: 10 Days (Dee Rommel #1) by Jule Selbo. Here is the first in a new series, created by an excellent author, who relocated from California to Portland, Maine in 2019. Jule Selbo has already published as a novelist, playwright and screenwriter but, according to the blurb, has always wanted to create a mystery series. I think I am hooked! Sure, it's nice to recognize place names familiar to me (York, Kennebunk, Ogunquit, etc, all south of Portland and in my stomping territory), but even if I weren't a resident, I would enjoy the book. Pacing is brisk, characters well-developed, and the two overlapping plot lines smooth. Dee Rommell is a policewoman on medical leave after a devastating work accident that has left her learning to live in new ways as she adjusts to life with a prothesis. She is working with a private investigator's office as she weighs whether or not to return to her former police job. Her immediate boss, Gordy, runs the business; he is also her godfather. He is away in Florida when an important job lands in her lap: Gordy's childhood friend, now the divorced wealthy Philip Claren, asks for their help in locating his beloved and brilliant daughter Lucy, who has disappeared, abandoning her lab in the Claren business, the world of AI, and who has announced her upcoming marriage, seemingly out of the blue. This plot line is complicated but wo well presented, and it allows the reader an easy introduction to the series. The second plot line involves Dee and several of her friends, all of whom testified against a brute named Billy Payer, who has recently been released from jail. When one of her besties ends up brutally assaulted, Dee is certain Billy is at the core of this crime and sets wheels in motion to solve it. Although this is more a thriller style than a cozy mystery, it is not full of gore, nor do you cringe at what might be around the next page, so all in all, a very satisfying read!