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Just My Luck - Kirkus Reviews

In this debut novel, a Southern woman who spent her adolescence on her own tracks a killer.
Tina Brooks, raised by her great-aunt, is 6 when she finally meets her birth mother, Antoinette. “Twanie” had her daughter in high school—after a rich jock classmate raped her. Twanie becomes Tina’s sole caretaker and is a strict but protective mom. Shockingly, she vanishes with her current boyfriend when her daughter is barely a teen. Tina, who’s Black, is scared and alone until a few kindhearted adults come to her aid. Though still young, she perseveres both as a student and a hard worker. Tina is usually withdrawn but eventually befriends Denise, a co-worker. When her new friend unexpectedly dies, Tina suspects she was murdered. Surely her co-worker’s abusive boyfriend is the killer. But Tina has never met him, and though she knows his first name and that he’s a cop, the Richmond Police Department has no record of him. So she hunts a killer, with Denise’s noticeably handsome brother, Kennard, lending a hand and, perhaps, a romantic interest. Seay and her older sister, Coles, who died before publication, have written a superb coming-of-age tale fused with a solid murder mystery. Character development is top-notch; the narrative initially centers on Twanie, making her sudden absence truly poignant. Both she and winsome Tina endure tough childhoods and strive to be independent. The men aren’t quite as engaging, so neither Kennard nor another potential suitor seem worthy of Tina. Despite instances of violence and relentless hardships, this story is relatively buoyant. Similarly, the authors tend to describe people in diverting fashion, like Tina’s “intimidating” boss-to-be, a “Xena Warrior Princess with all white hair.”
A strong female lead stars in this riveting cross-genre tale.