Rick Montoya is a police officer suspended on suspicion of accepting bribes. He’s innocent of the charges, but lays low for five months, working on a farm. When he returns to clear his name, he finds someone living in the basement apartment he rents. He gets a hotel that night, but before he can investigate, his apartment is burned down, its occupant and the landlady (Cheryl) both killed in the blaze. Rick needs to figure out who was in his apartment, and whether or not the fatal fire had been meant for Rick, instead.
This book is part of a series called Rapid Reads aimed at young adults and adults who struggle with literacy. These books provide low-level reading with topics and characters that are age-appropriate.
As far as a tool for helping struggling readers, this book misses the mark. The reading level is low as far as the lexile level is concerned. This just means that sentences are shorter and use shorter words. There are also few uncommon words. However, a low-level reader will struggle with several parts of this book. For example, the first chapter is Rick returning home from working on a farm for five months, but there’s only a vague reference to why he was working on the farm and what he’s returning to. Readers are regularly asked to draw inferences about information that is not there. The red herring takes up the majority of the story and is intricately laced into the actual events, so it’s probable that struggling readers will try to connect the red herring with what really happened. The solution is hinted at, but hard to know for sure. The suspects are difficult to differentiate, as are their motives. Even the murderer’s motivation is unclear because the writing isn't direct in the explanation. In short, there isn’t enough information for readers to draw the inferences they should be making, and way too much inferencing required when the events should be explicit.
Then there's the stereotypical main character. A shamed police officer who worked so hard that his marriage failed, and he likely is an alcoholic. (Another detail that wasn't clear.) All this guy needs is a weird hobby in his basement, which he might have had...if only his basement apartment hadn't been burned down.
The overall case is interesting, but it’s too many twists, turns, characters, and backstory for so short of a book. I think it could be quite successful with more room to develop these things and engage the reader.
• A few PG-13 swears
• No sexual issues
• Violence with the arson murders