Juniper Song—an unforgettable new crime heroine hailed as "young, sharp, and worldly-wise" by New York Times bestselling author Meg Gardiner—returns in this smart, fast-paced follow-up to Steph Cha's critically acclaimed debut Follow Her Home
Working as an apprentice at a P.I. firm, Juniper Song finds herself nose deep in a Hollywood murder scandal where the lies may be more glamorous than most, but the truths they cover are just as ugly. When a young woman named Daphne Freamon calls looking for an eye on her boyfriend, her boss punts the client to Song. Daphne is an independently wealthy painter living in New York, and her boyfriend Jamie Landon is a freelance screenwriter in Los Angeles, ghostwriting a vanity project for aging movie star Joe Tilley. Song quickly learns that there's more to this case than a simple tail, and her suspicions are confirmed when Tilley winds up dead in a hotel room. Nonetheless, when Jamie becomes the prime suspect in the movie star's murder, she agrees to help the charismatic couple discover the truth, even as the police build their case against Jamie. As she chases leads and questions grieving Hollywood insiders, she uncovers a sordid layer of blackmail and hidden identities, of a history of violence that leaves no one—not even Song—safe from judgment.
An edgy, gorgeously written read, Beware Beware is perfect for fans of Megan Abbott and Tana French. It's a tale that twists around the lies we tell ourselves and others, that examines the ugliness under the skin-deep glamor of L.A.
Praise for Follow Her Home
"[Song] is a compelling and original protagonist... One only hopes that Cha and her driven, neo-noir detective have more opportunities to explore those troubling intersections over many books to come." –LA Times
"Engrossing... Steph Cha's intriguing debut Follow Her Home works as a testament to the power of storytelling and a cautionary tale against forsaking reality for fiction...Cha elevates Follow Her Home with glimpses at the culture of Korean-American families." –Oline Cogdill, Tulsa World
"Stephanie Cha's brilliant debut is as Noir as Old Nick's sense of humour. Compelling from first to last page, she takes on contemporary L.A., sweeping the reader through Chandler's twilight, heartbroken city from mansions to faux K-town hostess bars. L.A. Noir at its finest." — Denise Mina, author of The Dead Hour
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
August 12, 2014 -
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9781466850156
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9781466850156
- File size: 611 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
June 9, 2014
At the start of Cha’s engaging sequel to 2013’s Follow Her Home, Daphne Freamon, a painter who lives in New York, hires Juniper Song, fledgling Los Angeles PI, to trail her boyfriend, Jamie Landon, ghostwriter for film star Joe Tilley. As Jamie, whom Daphne suspects is using and possibly selling cocaine, cruises the L.A. party scene, the two women develop a long-distance friendship over the phone. Then Joe is murdered, the police zero in on Jamie, and Song’s assignment changes to proving his innocence. After Daphne arrives in town, a sinister man stalking Song’s roommate is shot, and both PI and police suspect a link between the cases. Song soon becomes caught in a complex plot involving deception, betrayal, and revenge. Cha follows noir conventions, with Daphne as femme fatale and Song forced into morally ambiguous choices, but she also offers a plucky heroine, warm secondary characters, and a vivid portrait of L.A.’s Koreatown. Agent: Ethan Bassoff, Lippincott Massie McQuilkin. -
Kirkus
July 15, 2014
AKorean-American woman drifts from Yale into a job as a private investigator.Juniper Song's efforts as an amateur sleuth got her best friend killed (FollowHer Home, 2013). Now her friend Chaz Lindley, who's also her boss at thefirm where she's working as an apprentice, gives her a case of her own. NewYork artist Daphne Freamon wants Song to keep an eye on her boyfriend, JamieLandon. Jamie's working in Los Angeles as a writer for movie star Joe Tilley, and Daphne finds some of his behavior suspicious. Tailing Jamie tells Song thathe spends a lot of time partying and probably dealing drugs. When Tilley endsup dead, wrists slashed, in the bathtub of a Hollywood hotel, Jamie, the onlyone left in the suite after a wild party, becomes a person of interest. AfterDaphne flies in from New York, the relationship she and Song were building onthe phone becomes stronger as Song tries to help Jamie. Problems erupt inSong's own life when her roommate, Lori, whom she considers almost a youngersister, is suddenly pursued by a dangerous gangster who has some hold over heruncle. Song turns up information about Daphne and Jamie's past that raisesdoubts in her mind about the roles they are playing in Tilley's murder, but shestill trusts the charismatic couple. Even after Daphne breaks up with Jamieonce he's arrested for Tilley's murder, she still pays Song to prove himinnocent. Song's efforts in both cases get her in trouble, but like her idolPhilip Marlowe, she's determined to do the right thing.Danger, moral ambiguities, noir atmosphere and twists a snake would find hard tofollow abound in this cautionary tale.COPYRIGHT(2014) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Booklist
July 1, 2014
Apprentice PI Juniper Song usually does little more than track cheating spouses, and her new case seems to be more of the same. Daphne Freamon is worried that her boyfriend, Jamie Landon, recently hired as a ghostwriter for Hollywood star Joe Tilley, is not only doing drugs but also dealing. So Song tracks Landon and is nearby when Langdon finds Tilley dead after a party, from what initially looks like suicide but is ruled murder. Landon, a man Song has come to like, is targeted as the prime suspect, and Song's simple case is suddenly more complex and attracting media attention. As she continues to uncover secrets, Song finds herself smack in the middle of a skillfully planned scenario with a steadily increasing body count and no good way out. In her second outing, Korean Song defies the stereotype of the Asian American woman, working to overcome her background and what she suffered in Cha's debut, Follow Her Home (2013), and facing a formidable moral dilemma in the process. This is prime L.A. noir with a feminist slant.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2014, American Library Association.)
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