Scared to Live
3.5/5
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About this ebook
How do you investigate the murder of a woman without a life? That is the challenge facing Cooper and Fry when a reclusive agoraphobic is found shot to death in her home. With no friends, no family, and virtually no contact with the outside world, the dead woman may simply have been the unlucky victim of a random homicide.
At virtually the same time, a raging house fire claims the lives of a young mother and two of her children. But as the debris is cleared, troubling questions remain in the ashes—among them, how did the blaze start, where was the husband at two a.m. the night of the fire, and was it really the flames that killed his family?
Now, as Cooper faces the reemergence of a dark secret he'd hoped to forget, and Fry copes with problems both personal and professional, a horrific possibility begins to take shape: What if the two investigations are somehow connected? A mysterious and unpredictable killer is on the loose. And his next victims could very well be the only two cops who can stop him.
Stephen Booth
Stephen Booth's fourteen novels featuring Cooper and Fry, all to be published by Witness, have sold over half a million copies around the world.
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Reviews for Scared to Live
96 ratings6 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Scared to Live by Stephen Booth, 2006, 230 pages. I’m not sure that I like crime novels where two crimes in a small town turn out not merely to be related, but to connect with international criminal rings. It stretches my ability to believe in the story that I’m reading; my imagination does not keep up with the tale being presented to me. In this instance, Stephen Booth’s book did not flow in a way that I liked, rather it felt staged and each new step felt laboriously constructed. Scared to Live involves two major crimes: what seems like a professional killing of a reclusive middle-aged woman in a home that resembled a fortress, and a house set alight deliberately, and in which smoke inhalation killed a woman and two of her children. The subplots involve a Bulgarian police officer, human smuggling, a mentally ill character non-compliant with his meds, and a baby of uncertain origins. What might feel like a filled-out story in the hands of other writers seemed here like too much plot for one book, and although it was difficult for the police officers to ferret out the truth, it was also hard for me to follow too many strings through a long maze of pages. All this, yet I will not say that I disliked the novel. Until the insane web of coincidences descended on the story, I was enjoying the book, especially the depiction of Ben Cooper, the detective with country roots, an exceptionally three-dimensional character whom Booth has painted well. Booth also handled skillfully the mentally-ill character, showing a compassion and understanding of psychosis and hallucinations that is rare in novels. It’s not a book I would rush to recommend, but those who like complicated thrillers would probably enjoy it very much. I like crime novels that are simpler in their plotting, which is why I read Stephen Booth rarely. This book was not a bad read, but it isn’t memorable either.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Although I enjoyed this latest in the Cooper and Fry series, and will be awaiting the next quite eagerly, I found [book: Scared to Live] a bit disappointing. Perhaps it's because I figured out the Big Surprise at the end of the book several chapters in advance. The book deals with the murder of a mysterious, reclusive woman, to which Cooper is assigned, and also with the arson death of a woman and two children, which Fry investigates. Not surprisingly, the cases turn out to be related, and both have a connection with Bulgaria. Suspects proliferate and witnesses fail to tell the whole truth for reasons of their own. Issues that crop up in the cases under investigation also resonate strongly with Cooper's and Fry's own personal issues. Somehow it just didn't come together quite as well as Booth's previous books did for me. I hope he's not getting tired of the series.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Another great episode with Fry & Cooper; how long can Booth keep Diane in Derbyshire though? First time I've wondered if the characters weren't becoming a little stale. Good story that goes off where you aren't expecting it to.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5"Scared to Live" maintains the high standards of Stephen Booth's earlier Derbyshire detective novels. Cooper and Fry are likeable characters, in the sense of being enjoyable to read about, even if they are not exactly mould breaking. There are couple of really good dramatic moments involving a tower and a river flowing beneath an old cotton mill. I would tend to agree with the reviewer who said that you know who the bad guy is quite early on, were it not for the fact that there is more than one bad guy in this story. There are definitely two murderers, neither of whom I guessed, but I I had a rough idea of the final twist almost as soon as the character involved appeared. That didn't, however, lessen my enjoyment of the book.I like the way Booth mixes real and fictional places and manages to drop in all sorts of interesting trivia and topicality, for example, a piece of trivia about how the route of the M1 crosses back and forth across county borders is referred to in order to suggest there might be some logic to proposals to merge the Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire police forces. Proposals that, as far as I know, were shelved. I am not so sure about the claim that phone boxes were painted red in order to stand out in remote areas, I had always assumed that red was used simply because it was the colour associated with the Post Office which originally ran telephone services in Britain.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5#7 in the Ben Cooper & Diane Fry series. A house fire results in the death of a mother and two of her children, and a reclusive woman is shot dead when standing at her bedroom window. DS Fry is called to the house fire, DC Ben Cooper to the shooting. But inevitably the cases they are working on become connected. An excellently stimulating read.I think there are a couple of things that make this series different* I am struck by the fact that the language is "ordinary" i.e. everyday words particularly in the dialogues* the nasty cop/nice cop routine comes out strongly too in the partnership of DS Diane Fry and DC Ben Cooper. She is without doubt the nasty one, putting people offside all the time, but also asking the hard questions and pointing out the things that others gloss over. He is the intuitive one. You see that also in Dalziel and Pascoe but I actually think Stephen Booth does it better* Cooper and Fry often act in ignorance of each other's discoveries but the reader is omniscient, with the opportunity to solve the conundrums before either of the detectives* and finally there are some open ended questions. Times when the answers are not so readily forthcoming..
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A complex story bringing characters from Eastern Europe and Europol into fictional, sleepy Edendale. Ben Cooper and Diane Cooper are now well-established, filled-out and believable characters, about whom you care. Another cracking contemporary story from Stephen Booth