Exit Wounds (Joanna Brady Series #11)

Exit Wounds (Joanna Brady Series #11)

by J. A. Jance
Exit Wounds (Joanna Brady Series #11)

Exit Wounds (Joanna Brady Series #11)

by J. A. Jance

Paperback(Mass Market Paperback)

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Overview

Sheriff Joanna Brady seeks an elusive and chillingly brutal killer whose crimes run deep into the past in the next New York Times bestseller from the author of Partner in Crime


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780062088154
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 06/26/2012
Series: Joanna Brady Series , #11
Pages: 432
Sales rank: 85,144
Product dimensions: 4.10(w) x 7.40(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

About The Author
J. A. Jance is the New York Times bestselling author of the J. P. Beaumont series, the Joanna Brady series, the Ali Reynolds series, six thrillers about the Walker Family, and one volume of poetry. Born in South Dakota and brought up in Bisbee, Arizona, she lives with her husband in Seattle, Washington.

Hometown:

Bellevue, Washington

Date of Birth:

October 27, 1944

Place of Birth:

Watertown, South Dakota

Education:

B. A., University of Arizona, 1966; M. Ed. in Library Science, University of Arizona, 1970

Read an Excerpt

Exit Wounds

Chapter One

Late on Tuesday afternoon, Sheriff Joanna Brady sat at her desk, stared at the pages of her calendar, and knew that Butch Dixon, her husband, was absolutely right. She was overbooked. When he had mentioned it at breakfast that morning, she had done the only reasonable thing and denied it completely.

Coffeepot in hand, Butch had stood looking at the week's worth of calendar he had finally convinced Joanna to copy and tape to the refrigerator door in a vain attempt at keeping track of her comings and goings.

"Two parades on Friday?" he had demanded, studying the two pages of copied calendar entries she had just finished posting. "According to this, the parades are followed by appearances at two community picnics." Butch shook his head. "And you still think you'll be at the fairgrounds in time for Jenny's barrel-racing event, which will probably start right around four? You're nuts, Joey," he concluded after a pause. "Totally round the bend. Or else you've picked up a clone without telling me about it."

"Don't worry," she told him. "I'll be fine."

Butch had poured coffee and said nothing more. Now, though, late in the afternoon and after putting in a full day's work, Joanna studied her marathon schedule and worried that maybe Butch was right. How would she cover all those bases?

The Fourth of July had always been one of Joanna's favorite holidays. She loved going to the parade, hosting or attending a backyard barbecue, and then ending the evening in town watching Bisbee's community fireworks display.

But this wasn't a typical Fourth of July. This was an election year, and Joanna Brady was an active-duty sheriff trying to do her job in the midst of a stiffly contested reelection campaign. Rather than watching a single parade, she was scheduled to participate in two of them -- driving her Crown Victoria in Bisbee's parade starting at eleven and in Sierra Vista's, twenty-five miles away, starting at twelve-thirty. She was also slated to appear briefly at two community picnics that day -- in Benson and St. David. The day would end with her making a few introductory remarks prior to the annual fireworks display eighty miles from home in Willcox. Stuffed in among all her official duties, she needed to be at the Cochise County fairgrounds outside of Douglas at the stroke of four o'clock.

After years of practicing around a set of barrels positioned around the corral at High Lonesome Ranch, Jennifer Ann Brady had declared that she and her sorrel quarter horse, Kiddo, were ready for their public barrel-racing debut. That Fourth of July would mark Jenny's first-ever competition on the junior rodeo circuit. Joanna's showing up for the barrel-race rodeo had nothing at all to do with politics and everything to do with motherhood.

Be there or be square, Joanna told herself grimly.

Looking away from her calendar, Joanna walked across to the dorm-sized refrigerator Butch had brought back from Costco in Tucson and installed in her office. She retrieved a bottle of water. Taking a thoughtful drink, she stared out the window at the parched hills surrounding the Cochise County Justice Center. The thermometer perched in the shade under the roof of a covered parking stall just outside her office door still hovered around 103 degrees. Summertime temperatures in and around Bisbee seldom exceeded the low nineties, so having the temperature still that hot so late in the afternoon was bound to be a record breaker.

Inside Joanna's office, things weren't much better. The thermostats at all county-owned facilities were now set at a budget/energy-conscious 80 degrees -- too warm to think or concentrate. She had a fan in her office, too, but she hated to use it because it tended to blow loose papers all over her desk -- and there were always loose papers. The radio, playing softly behind her desk, switched from music to bottom-of-the-hour news where the weather was a big concern. All of Arizona found itself in the grip of a severe drought and what was, even for July, a fierce heat wave.

The radio reporter announced that flights in and out of Phoenix's Sky Harbor airport had been grounded due to concerns that the heat-softened runways might be damaged by planes landing and taking off in the record-breaking 126-degree temperatures. The announcer's running gag about its being a dry heat didn't help Joanna's frame of mind. Bisbee, situated two hundred miles southeast of Phoenix, was a couple of thousand feet higher than Phoenix and more than twenty degrees cooler, but that didn't help, either. Deciding to ignore the weather, Joanna switched off the radio and returned to studying her calendar and its self-inflicted difficulties.

Months earlier, one of her least favorite deputies, Kenneth W. Galloway, had officially announced his intention to run against her. Bankrolled by a wife with a booming real estate business in Sierra Vista, Ken, Jr., had resigned from Joanna's department within weeks of announcing his candidacy. Minus the burden of a regular job, Galloway had been on the stump ever since. He spent every day on the campaign trail, crisscrossing the county with door-belling efforts and public appearances.

And that was where he had Joanna at a disadvantage. With a department to run, she couldn't afford to doorbell all day long. She had done her share of rubber-chicken banquets and pancake-breakfast speeches for local civic organizations, but she'd had to squeeze them in around her regular duties. Which was why she had said yes to appearing at all those various Fourth of July events. She'd be able to cross paths and shake hands with far more people at those holiday get-togethers than she would have been able to see under ordinary circumstances ...

Exit Wounds. Copyright © by J. Jance. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

Interviews

An Interview with J. A. Jance

Whether you like police procedurals, character-driven mysteries that pack an emotional punch, or stories that hinge on the gritty realities of headline news, bestselling author J. A. Jance has it all in her hard-hitting series featuring Arizona sheriff Joanna Brady. Ransom Notes talked to the creator about this absorbing series and how she manages to incorporate so many different facets into each new novel.

Ransom Notes: What is it about the mystery genre that meant the most to you when you started writing about Joanna Brady?

J. A. Jance: My only rule in writing mysteries is that the bad guy must be punished. When I started writing the Joanna Brady books, Joanna wasn't a police officer. But I soon found I had written police procedurals for so long that I was just unable to write about an amateur sleuth, so I made her a cop.

RN: What made you decide to use a Southwest setting?

JAJ: The Southwest setting has had a major influence on my life. That's where I grew up, scrambling barefoot around the desert all summer long. The idea of using an animal-hoarder plot came to me after one of my sisters (she's head of Animal Control in Pinal County) told me about them. It's easy to read about people with 20 or 30 animals and to assume that these people are trying to help animals. But, apparently, these hoarders are almost always very troubled people. Also, frequently the animals they take in are neglected and aren't given necessary vaccinations. And, even after these animals are rescued from the hoarder, they're often so difficult to handle that they must be destroyed. Taking a puppy or kitten into your life is a lifetime commitment. With dogs, that can mean 10 to 12 years. With cats, it can be even longer. I'm writing this with my dog Aggie's head on my knee. I love my dogs, so it's my job to see that in addition to affection and exercise, Aggie and her sister, Daphne, have regular shots, proper food, enough water, and that they're never left in a hot automobile. I've also made sure they've had obedience training because, earlier this year, I was bitten by a relative's dog, and I was astonished to learn that I was the seventh person who had been bitten by that dog. A far as biting goes, I'm for zero tolerance. That's the other part of being a responsible dog owner.

RN: What made you decide to show how various situations -- from animal rights issues to Joanna's pregnancy and the illegal-aliens case -- affect Joanna's reelection campaign?

JAJ: As sheriff, Joanna isn't able to concentrate on one case at a time, and the same thing is true in her personal life. I think that makes her more interesting, and it also makes her more realistic. Most people don't get to do just one thing at a time. I expect Joanna's pregnancy to give her life a whole new dynamic for future books…and add new complications. If pets are in my books, somebody needs to take care of them. If kids are in my books, the same applies. All I can say is, I'm glad Joanna is married to Butch. It will make my life much simpler. There are more Joanna Brady books already under contract, so it's safe to say she wins reelection.

I like to hear what readers have to say about my books. Fans can contact me through my web site, jajance.com.

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