From Publishers Weekly
Entertainment attorney Passman concocts a predictable
crime thriller set in L.A. about a self-proclaimed
psychic who doesnt know the whereabouts of her own
father yet professes to intuit detailed information
about a series of increasingly grisly murders. Lisa
Cleary presents herself to Professor Michael Rennick, a
Harvard Law/Yale Medical grad who handles pro bono cases
and writes bestsellers while teaching law at UCLA.
Rennick agrees to make time to counsel Cleary about her
visions around the same time LAPD detective Danny Talon
asks Rennick to consult on a series of murders of young
women. (Italicized sections meant to be the secret
journal of the killer are inserted episodically in the
text.) When Clearys visions lead to discovery of the
murderers equipment, detective Talon wonders to Rennick
if Cleary might be the killer, a suggestion the
psychiatrist dismisses. A subplot concerns the romantic
discord between Rennick and Julie, his lover of three
months whos also a graduate student in his class. Julie
must choose between staying with commitment-phobic
Rennick or going to New York to study with a legendary
Nobel laureate in DNA who now works in the humanities
because the manipulation of genetic material is leading
to a Hitleresque system of discrimination. Though the
storys many threads produce a disorganized plot, many of
Passmans characters are vividly detailed (Rennick is
colorblind, the murder victims are mostly placid New
Agers), and even if they haphazardly propel the story
forward, readers may enjoy their chaotic drift toward a
tidy finale.