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Blood Vines
Blood Vines
Author: Erica Spindler
Thirty-something Alex Owens knows very little about her childhood or who she really is, her only family an absent, emotionally fragile mother. Alex spent most of her adulthood searching for the missing link, drifting from job to job, relationship to relationship. But when an infant's remains are unearthed in her hometown in back-country Californ...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780312363925
ISBN-10: 0312363923
Publication Date: 3/2/2010
Pages: 352
Rating:
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
 51

3.9 stars, based on 51 ratings
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback, Audio CD
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

sfc95 avatar reviewed Blood Vines on + 686 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
I am a huge Erica Spindler fan and am thrilled when her book comes out, this one did not disappoint. It was filled with suspense and it kept me guessing. Seemed a little different using Sonoma Wine Country as the backdrop, but it worked out great, I had to get my copy from te library so unfortunately I can't swap it, but find a copy it won't take you long to read and you will be glad you did.
faithspage avatar reviewed Blood Vines on + 42 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
Really enjoyed the book! Great author! Just enough romance/murder
reviewed Blood Vines on + 40 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I absolutely loved this book. It grabs your attention from the start and the storyline is great. The characters are very likeable and realistic. The setting is well described, but not a lot of unnecessary details. I highly recommend this book if you are looking for a fast-pace thriller. Lots of twist and turns. GOOD READ!!!!
reviewed Blood Vines on + 80 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Fantastic book, if you are a fan of Erica Spindler this one will not dissapoint you. It takes place in Sonoma wine country. A mystery that comes back when a dead baby's body is found buried in a wine crate. Could it be the body of Dylan Sommer who dissappeared 25 years ago?
blessed1 avatar reviewed Blood Vines on + 127 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
As with all of Erica Spindler's books, this one grabs you in the beginning and doesn't turn loose until the last page. A white knuckle ride!!
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MELNELYNN avatar reviewed Blood Vines on + 669 more book reviews
Alexandra Clarkson is having nightmares again. The images are scary ~ hooded figures, a faceless screaming baby, flickering candles and naked bodies writhing together. She has no idea what the dreams mean. Could it be tied to the work she is doing on her dissertation of religious practices and rituals? But the images were so vibrant, so real. Her booty call, ex-husband, psychologist thinks she could be repressing memories from her past. Memories that should stay buried??? But then tragedy strikes. Alexandra's bio-polar mother Patsy commits suicide. And along with her death, Alex realizes she may never find out the truth about who her father is. While going through her mothers things, she finds an article in the newspaper with the name of a detective and his phone number circled. When she calls the number to find out what her mother was so curious about she was rocked to her core.

Detective Daniel Reed is horrified by what he sees. The virtual mummified remains of an infant were uncovered while vineyard workers were removing some old, infested vines. The vineyard belongs to the Sommer family. A family that 25 years ago suffered the loss of their beloved 6 month old son Dylan, believed to have been kidnapped right from his crib while his sisters slept right across the hall.

After meeting with Daniel, Alex is more confused than ever. It seems that when she was a young child her mother was married to Harlan Sommer, Dylan was her baby brother, and they all lived at the vineyard together. But after his disappearance the marriage collapsed. Patsy took Alex away, never to return again and at the same time virtually erasing all of Alex's memory of her time there. Upon arriving at the vineyard, Alex is greeted with mixed emotions. While some are so happy to have her back, there are others that are terrified of what she may remember.

While Daniel works the police angle of the case, Alex works the personal one. She returns to the vineyard because the memories are most vivid there. But the more she remembers the more she is terrorized. Ominous messages are left for her, including a sacrificed lamb in her bathroom and people she knows and care for start turning up dead. The families of Sonoma County are rich, connected and will stop at pretty much nothing to keep their perfect imagine in tact. But would they go so far as to kill for it? And while both Alex and Daniel are working their respective angles, they're also working each other. There is no denying the attraction between the two of them - it's electric. But what happens when it starts to look like Alex might have something to do with what has been going on and Daniel needs to start playing cop and stop playing lover?

The more Alex digs the more disgusted she becomes. She soon wonders if she really wants to find out the truth. Does she really want to know who her father is? Can she believe the truth she hears about her mother? Can she forgive Daniel for treating her like a suspect and open herself up to the love he apparently has for her? Blood Vines is an exhilarating saga of love, murder, family drama, wonderful characters, and long buried secrets that will keep you guessing right up until the very end. It's a story that should be read slowly and savored, enjoying each word as you would a fine wine. This is one book not to be missed.
reviewed Blood Vines on + 5 more book reviews
I thought it was okay, well a little better then okay
reviewed Blood Vines on + 3152 more book reviews
Not a heartstopping on the edge kind of reading you might expect but will keep you interested to the end.
Tunerlady avatar reviewed Blood Vines on + 581 more book reviews
This was the first Erica Spindler book I've read, and to be honest, it seemed a little slow in the beginning, confusing at times, and predictable in it's predictability. It was a good read, though and I found it intriguing and entertaining.


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