Queen of the Night (Walker Family, #4) (2024)

Patti

202 reviews90 followers

August 2, 2023

Quite disappointing and probably won’t read any more of this series. A lot of characters and fairly slow paced. Her Joanna Brady series is far better.

Terri

253 reviews53 followers

April 5, 2011

Queen of the Night: A Novel of Suspense is the fourth in the Walker family series. This series has always struck me as a bit darker and grittier than Jance's other series, but with Queen of the Night she seems to have written a more intricate suspense novel that takes the focus off of the evil deeds of the bad guys and places it on the connections between characters. The resultant beauty in those connections and the blessings that can come out of tragic events and circ*mstances is a major focus in this book.

The complex character relationships could have been difficult to follow, but Jance's story flowed exceptionally well and made those connections effortless to follow. The relational aspect of the book also had an extraordinary symmetry to it -- rather like the "circle of life" concept. There was a lyricism to this story that I haven't fully experienced in Jance's other works and, I think, makes this one shine above the rest.

For those, like me, who have grown up in the Southwest there is plenty of regional atmosphere. The desert flora is represented by the Night-blooming Cereus which blooms once a year and has symbolic significance to the Tohono O'oodham people. Jance also weaves into her own story some of the legends of the Tohono O'oodham people (Desert People).

This is, hands down, the best J.A. Jance novel I have ever read. Get it. Read it. Really.

    2011

Sheila Myers

Author16 books18 followers

June 2, 2016

Another great book by JA Jance! Unlike her other two suspense series, I wouldn't classify "Queen of the Night" as completely falling into the suspense category. I classify this one more as half suspense and half family drama. Besides the suspense of her other crime series, the Walker Family series shows a lot more of the family dynamics at work with the main characters of the book. I also enjoy reading about the Tohono O'odham culture.

    suspense

Shomeret

1,083 reviews245 followers

August 3, 2015

This is the first book I've read by J. A. Jance. Queen of the Night is actually #4 in a series, but reading out of order never dismays me. I believe that books ought to stand on their own. If they don't, it's not my responsibility to remedy the situation by reading other books. I will only read more books by the author if I am hooked by the first one I tried. That's why I'm so careful about my choice of first read by an author. The Queen of the Night has a story line that deals with the legends and customs of the Tohono O'odham of Arizona. I tend to like mysteries and thrillers that involve Native American background. I definitely knew that I'd come to the right place when I saw that Jance had dedicated the book to Tony Hillerman.

I do feel that Jance reached deep for the full humanity of all the prominent characters including the serial killer. I don't mean that they were all sympathetic, but I understood where they were coming from. We saw the heart of some of the relationships depicted in this novel. The relationship between Diana Ladd and Brandon Walker was particularly moving.

This was a strong book that also taught me a bit about the Tohono O'odham. I will definitely want to read another book in this series soon.

For my complete review see http://wwwbookbabe.blogspot.com/2015/...

    my-reviews mystery-thriller

Debbie

540 reviews39 followers

October 24, 2010

Find Diane Walker working on her latest book and retired Brandon Walker trying to stay busy with TLC (The Last Chance). Spending most of his time going back and forth between ailing fellow TLC detective and longtime friend trying to find the answers to a very old case and his wife who seems to be having some struggles of her own. The newest of the murder rampages falls to Brian Fellows to look at with the help of the border patrol officer (Dan Pardee) that found the bodies. The four bodies were found on the Tohono O’odham Nation land, when the next of kin notifications were made, the death count went up by three more. Leaving only a small child behind as a witness, Dr. Lani Walker, with the help of Dan Pardee, kept the child in the Hospital for safety. Tracking and catching this killer before he realizes that he left any witnesses might be more dangerous than any of them realize.

Book 4 ….. I received this as part of the LibraryThing Early Reviewer program. When I realized that it was actually the forth (4th) book of the series, I decided that it would possibly be best to read the first three (3) of the series before I read this one so that I could understand the story line a little better. I was right to do that, I felt that if I had just read this story as a stand alone I would have not been able to follow all of the characters as well (there was a lot of characters in this one), most were reoccurring from the previous books. The bouncing back and forth between stories and years and places was a little confusing at times, but the main story line covered only a couple of days in early June 2009. Enjoyed the side story of Brandon and Diane, this did have the feel of the last of them, kind of a conclusion. I suppose if JA Jance wanted to continue this particular type of series, she could follow Lani, Brian and Dan. I never did figure out why the temperature was so important that it had a title type position with the places, dates and times, but it does help show how the desert can be different times of the day. I like reading about Tucson (I lived there for a long time) and this series has been an interesting way to remember the city.

    contemporary-fiction mystery-suspense

Katy

5 reviews1 follower

August 15, 2014

This book started off way too slow for me. There were multiple character stories being introduced quickly in short segments that were not chronological. I felt like I needed to take notes on the dates, times, locations, and temperatures that headed off each segment. I had a hard time connecting with any of the characters or their stories at first.

Eventually, things picked up, some of the threads started weaving together, and finally the plot moved more smoothly.

There is one main thread that links some of the characters, and another few threads that didn't feel relevant to the main story. I was disappointed with the way the lesser threads were tied off.

I'm only giving it two stars because it took so long to get going and was more crowded than interesting and complicated.

Coleen

1,008 reviews49 followers

August 26, 2018

I have previously read some novels by J.A. Jance and liked them, so I thought this would be a good one!
And the 'Queen of the Night' is actually a good premise upon which to write a book, a flower that blooms once a year, at its own whim. But the characters were too many, too confusing, too uninteresting - and the murders to be solved were too obvious and ordinary - no real excitement.
So I read the whole book, but would not give it a rounding endorsem*nt.

Cheryl

2,927 reviews36 followers

February 5, 2020

I usually enjoy JA Jance’s books more, this one seemed confusing with flashbacks every other page. 4 people are found dead in the wilderness with only a 4 year old left alive as a wittnes. Dr Lani Walker and dan pardee an Iraq war veteran come to the rescue. Lani had a horrible childhood and she sees that reflected in the child. Truly horrific crime is uncovered.

Steve Holden

477 reviews12 followers

July 15, 2017

This is my first Jance novel. I know she's a well received author who has garnered a lot of acclaim. I like a lot of the aspects of this novel. This is very character driven, and it tells a story of how a senseless crime can affect a lot of people. I feel the character element in this one is very strong. That being said, the characters are plentiful, with some building off previous novels. This one can stand alone, but I do feel a lot of attention must be paid to the backstory built in the early going. There are a lot of plots and subplots that the reader must follow to the climax of this one. In the end, I like the story told about the interconnectedness of actions and violence, across cultures. It's difficult to connect all of the dots, but I do feel I enjoyed this enough to check out more of Jance's work in the future.

Richard

1,127 reviews26 followers

August 30, 2010

This is Ms. Jance's best work yet. She has picked up the torch dropped with the death of Tony Hillerman. She successfully weaves a story of the Night Blooming Cereus (Queen of the Night) from an ancient Apache legend into a modern day crime spree.

The settings are realistically portrayed, the characters developed thoroughly, the dialogue believable. However, as impressed as I was with the story, I don't think 93 degrees Fahrenheit is high enough to get concerned with. I also had a problem with the table being set all afternoon in the desert for a picnic. I think there would be enough grit on them to remove the finish.

Two small complaints in an excellent read. Real suspense and drama. I really liked the parallel stories.

Nancy Ellis

1,423 reviews44 followers

November 7, 2017

Great suspense in this story made up of murders from the past and present! I love the way she builds up to the present-day crime by taking us through the actions of those involved in the hours leading up to it, once again giving us terrific character development. The final pages keep you glued to the book. I'm so glad I stuck with this series. I didn't really care for the first two books, but the subsequent ones have been well worth the wait!

Mark

2,332 reviews23 followers

June 4, 2016

This series by Jance is surpassing the JP Beaumont series in personal popularity...the characters have grown on me and as always Jance can turn out a great yarn...It possibly has a lot to do with the family values that permeate it's entire length...FUN, FUN, FUN!!!

    police-pi-mystery

Penny Evenson

433 reviews4 followers

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March 5, 2019

In Queen of the Night, New York Times bestselling author J.A. Jance brings back the Walker family—introduced in Hour of the Hunter, terrorized in Kiss of the Bees, and last seen in Day of the Dead. A multilayered thriller, gripping and unforgettable—evocatively set in the breathtaking Arizona desert—Queen of the Night is a chilling tale of murder past and present that connects and devastates three separate families.

This was a great book - very interesting about the Queen of the Night plant in Arizona!

Randi Daeger

671 reviews39 followers

March 11, 2021

Although I gave this four stars be warned that while the story is really good you also get too much back story. I don’t think she needed to fill in every little thing that happened in the earlier books. It slowed the story too much. But as I said...really good story.

Leigh

224 reviews

June 3, 2017

I did enjoy this book . This is the second book, I have read about the Tohono O' odham people. I would love to see the Queen of the Night. !!

Lois Kosco

4 reviews

August 1, 2019

I loved this whole series. So sad it’s over.

Angie

521 reviews

July 1, 2021

I normally love J A Jance's books but this one just didn't capture me. The characters didn't grab me - neither did the story line. DNF

    5000-books-2021

Paul

253 reviews28 followers

September 18, 2010

This is the fourth installment of J. A. Jance’s Walker Family series.

This may be my favorite Jance book to date. It has all of what has become a trademark of this series; a moderate build-up with a fast-paced climactic ending, great story telling, mixing of Papago mythology and culture and great character development.

The start of this story was unique in that three different crimes that happened decades apart are eventually intertwined and become related and relevant to the main focus of the book. This weaving carried through to the warp-speed development of the main characters. While Jance uses a somewhat moderate chronology in her other series, it’s not uncommon for decade time spans to elapse between Walker novels. Within this one book, some chapters skip through six-month time frames. A lot happens to the characters in this book.

Finishing the book, I have the distinct feeling this may be the end of the Walker series. From the start of the series four volumes ago, the reader has covered 30 to 40 years of the characters’ lives. Brandon and Diana are now in their 70’s and the events of this book simply don’t leave much more room for growth. However, given the past time jumps, it’s possible the series could pick up with some of the newly introduced child characters. This book ends in 2010 however, so this would require Jance to venture into science fiction or fantasy.

I’ve really enjoyed the style Jance developed in this series and I’ve become attached to the characters. I hope the author will consider continuing this series if there’s any reasonable way to do so.

Gwen

172 reviews

July 28, 2014

Well, written, and it made me sweat!!! I lived in Arizona for 1 1/2 years and worked in the heat, I could feel it. I do not normally read murder mysteries except for the Winspear Daisie Dobbs series. I thoroughly enjoyed her characters but it really bothers me that these murders actually do go on and I can only hope that no one is inspired by reading methods our talented writers think of. Strange line of thoughts I know, but I was married to a policeman and came to believe that people with troubled minds feed on what they read and see in movies or on TV. Back to the story line. Well, thought out and completely feasible, it kept me emotionally involved. Oh, yes, the reason I read it was because of the description on the inside flap and online. I love Arizona from one end the other and the desert has a beauty all it's own. I wish I had known about the Queen of the Night while I was there.

kaoyler

164 reviews3 followers

October 15, 2011

This is my first J. A. Jance book, and I have to say I was quite impressed. It won't be my last. I went to her website and was delighted by her comments about the books she's written. I thought if her books were as clever I'd been missing out on something. I was right. This is the fourth in her Walker series, but she was able to catch me up so that I didn't feel left out. There are a lot of characters but she manages to pull everything together at the end. I want to go back and catch up with some of the characters and really hope she plans to continue on with others. She also did a great job of capturing Arizona. I won't go into the plot except to say there are murders and they end up pulling in the characters. I also have this on audiobook and loved listening to Gregory Itzin. I listened until I couldn't stand it, then picked up the book because I can always read faster.

Karen

555 reviews4 followers

February 6, 2021

Since I haven't read the three previous Walker Family books, it me took a bit of time at first to keep all of the characters straight, but it soon began to tie together. The title refers to a desert plant that only blooms once a year, at night, with white, showy and nicely scented flowers! By daybreak, the flowers are already wilting and if you missed the show you will have to wait for another year for another chance! So this occasion is the backdrop of a horrific mass murder site that the detectives have to figure out what happened, with very few leads. The ending comes together in a very satisfying fashion, in my estimation.

Peter

313 reviews4 followers

April 30, 2011

this was a great read!!! the indian lore and the characters just seem to bring it to life. it is a mystery of course but in my minds eye it is a special mystery. there is nho rushing to end the book and carch everythig up in the last ten pages or so.. the author brings the book to its conclussion at quite a resonable pace and lets you enjoy it..i highly recomend

Sanae

23 reviews

Read

May 21, 2018

I have developed feelings in characters of Walker series. Are people born evil or something happens to us which kills all kindness, compassion and love out of our mind? It is always difficult to do the right thing when we don't know what the right thing is. Like the saying, "What doesn't kill you makes you stronger". I hope Brian will come out with disabilities & start new series.

JoAnn Jordan

332 reviews68 followers

August 4, 2010

This is an excellent suspense novel. The story has great characters and moves with a good speed. So many things are related, but only come together in the end.

I enjoyed this book and recommend it.

    books-read-in-2010

Connie D

1,537 reviews52 followers

February 12, 2016

I always enjoy J.A. Jance's books...This one started a little slowly for me because there were so many characters to keep track of, a lot of jumping between characters....but once I had the characters (and their stories) straight, their interwoven stories made it more interesting, more meaningful.

    a-jance

Amy

53 reviews1 follower

January 11, 2020

I really enjoyed this story! It had a slow start, took me a bit to get into it, but once it caught traction, it was really hard to put down! I was on the edge of my seat through the entire end! Awesome read!!!!

Alice Benson

Author13 books25 followers

January 21, 2021

I really enjoyed this book. It's #4 in a series, and I haven't read the first 3, but that didn't detract from the story for me, at all. Good pacing, interesting characters, nice description, great sense of setting.

Jan Mancini

121 reviews1 follower

August 4, 2010

This was the long awaited 4th book of the Walker family series. It was worth waiting for... very wonderful in typical JA Jance style!

Tomatolover

42 reviews

January 2, 2015

I enjoyed this book. I really like this author. Sorry, so details on the book, but I love the characters and story lines,

Cornerofmadness

1,786 reviews16 followers

July 30, 2023

This one was one of those I didn't know was four books into a series but I didn't feel too lost. It was written as a tribute to Tony Hillerman (with the Native American connection you'd expect). It put me in mind of Columbo in that you know who did it and it's more about how the detectives do their thing.

It was also one I came close to DNFing. It's a very slow starter but that wasn't my issue Each chapter is long and multiple point of views per chapter, each one well marked with who, where, when and even temperature (why I don't know. I kept expecting temperature to play a role as a result but it never did). In the beginning there were about 8 different points of view to get through (less after the murders)

The title refers to a night blooming cactus that blooms one night a year giving us both the festival view of it and the Indigenous people's view of the same. We have the Walker family including their adopted Native daughter, Lani who is a doctor and his mentee Dan Pardee, also Native (but Apache who were the historic enemies of the local group which much is made of in this) who is fresh from Iraq and now working with an all Indigenous branch of border patrol.

Before long we have a violently orphaned Native girl that Dan and Lani have to help and keep safe while the detectives try to find who killed four people, the person this four year old witnessed fleeing the crime scene that took her mom.

Once we get to the murder the story moves much quicker with a lot of personal side jaunts, some of which are a little annoying (like Lani's mom who thinks she's got dementia with zero testing and basically self diagnosing and plans to die instead of you know asking her doctor daughter who knows instantly what it actually is). I was also a little creeped out with the insta-love, insta-marriage ending but that's me.

It was overall not bad and I might even read others in this series but I'm not sure.

    suspense
Queen of the Night (Walker Family, #4) (2024)
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