Her Darkest Secret by Jessica R. Patch
Series: FBI: Strange Crimes Unit
Publisher: Love Inspired Trade on June 28, 2022
REVIEW BY STACI TROILO
Her Darkest Secret is the first book in the FBI: Strange Crimes Unit series written by Jessica R. Patch. As I’m a huge fan of law enforcement procedurals, this description immediately appealed to me. I don’t often find FBI special crimes mysteries in the Christian genre. Twisted religious mockery crimes? In abundance. Crimes where the heroes are believers? Not so much. Christian crime novels are often too soft or too simple for my taste, so I tried to manage my expectations.
This far exceeded them.
The heroine in this story, Fiona Kelly, became an FBI agent to find the serial killer (dubbed “Rhyme” because of his MO) who abducted her and murdered her sister years earlier. This event, as you might expect, defines her, and she can’t move on with her life until she catches him. This singular obsession cost her the man she loves, Special Agent Asa Kodiak.
Aaa has his own issues, but since he found faith in God, he’s moved on with his life and begun to find peace. When Rhyme resurfaces after a long absence, Fiona wants in on the investigation. Her arrival complicates things and brings long-buried feelings bubbling to the surface. It puts his new relationship in jeopardy. It puts lives in jeopardy.
When Rhyme gets too close, Fiona seeks comfort in the one place—with the one man—who ever made her feel safe.
He continued to whisper comfort into her soul. Words that sounded a lot like prayers. And at this moment, she wouldn’t object. Wouldn’t tell him that prayers fell on deaf ears. Because she needed the hope.
Jessica R. Patch, Her Darkest Secret
There is a romantic element, but it’s a small part of the story and is never inappropriate. Obviously there is a religious component, but while it is overt, it never felt preachy. First and foremost, it’s an FBI procedural with a twisted killer, and it kept me racing through the story toward the reveal.
There are tragedies in this tale but no gore on the page. The plot unfolds organically at a solid pace, ratcheting up at the climax. The main characters are well developed with satisfying arcs; secondary characters are interesting with room to grow in subsequent books, and the red herrings will keep your head spinning to the last second.
I really enjoyed this book and intend to devour this series. If I’m being picky, I’ll take off half a fish for some minor things that seemed a bit too implausible, but nothing so egregious that it detracts from the story. If you’re looking for a good Christian mystery/thriller, I suggest starting with this one.

I read Her Darkest Secret through Everand.

Great review Staci! Sounds like a good one 🙂
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Thanks, Denise. I really enjoyed it. I think you would, too.
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Oo, Staci, this sounds like an exciting story. High stakes, an old foe, and a twisty plot? Sign me up! I read another of Jessica R. Patch’s books and really liked it. She sure knows how to grip the reader. Great review!
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It was your earlier review (the third book in this series) that introduced me to her. I devoured the series and am now a huge fan. Thanks, Priscilla.
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This sounds like a good one, Staci. I know what you mean about Christian crime novels being too soft, but I came across a Christian novel many years ago that featured a torture scene worse than anything I’ve read or seen in movies/TV – and you know the type of shows I/we watch. I’ve never forgotten it.
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Wow. That is unusual. But I’d probably be interested in that, Teri. On the other hand, Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ was painfully brutal. I’ve only watched it once. (How’s that for Catholic guilt?)
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I have a friend who was raised Catholic but is now Presbyterian. She still has Catholic guilt, lol. I think it was the Ted Dekker Paradise series.
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Yeah, guilt is my status quo. lol
I’ve often thought about reading Dekker. Maybe now I will. Thanks for the suggestion.
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Wow, I’ve read a number of Dekker books (my favorite is Thr3e), but I must never have read that series, or I’d surely remember. I’m actually kind of shocked to learn Dekker wrote something like that. It’s not what I would expect from him.
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I’ll have to look for that one, too. Thanks, Mae.
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I’m intrigued, Staci! I haven’t read anything by Patch, but your review is compelling. I will check this one out for sure. Thank you!
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I’m glad you enjoyed the review, Gwen. I think you’d really like Patch’s work.
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Excellent review, Staci, and you described my ideal Christian mystery/thriller. I grabbed a copy and look forward to the read. What surprised me was how few reviews pushed back because the author put the print version in the categories of Psychological Thrillers (Books), Romantic Suspense (Books), and Suspense Thrillers. In contrast, Patch categorized the Kindle version in Police Romance, Christian Suspense, Clean & Wholesome Romance (Kindle Store). I read where the few negative reviews were from people surprised by the Christian content. For writers of Christian themed fiction, I see the potential to minimize (not eliminate) those surprises by other categories. Thanks for another inspiring review!
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If I had to guess (and this is purely speculation), she was trying to hit as many categories as possible for maximum exposure. When an author writes a mashup of genres, Amazon won’t expand the category allotment past three, and sometimes (like for mashups) that simply isn’t enough. The risks in doing so are negative reviews because of reader expectations and also missing an audience because people were searching for ebooks in the categories assigned to the print books. Nothing’s ever easy. 😊
I’m so glad the review appealed to you, Grant. I hope you enjoy the work as much as I did.
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Thanks, Staci. With Amazon categories, sometimes it’s a roll of the dice. After I read the book, I’ll fire up my Publisher Rocket app and look for other possibilities. Out of the thousands, it’s tough picking the right three, especially for the mashups.
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I love Publisher Rocket! It’s a time-saver and a game-changer.
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The app has so many uses, and it reminds me of that old advertisement. “Simply switch it from slice to dice and make Julian fries.” It’s my Swiss army knife for research.
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Your comparison to that old ad made me laugh. The Swiss army knife analogy made me nod. I couldn’t agree more.
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I generally like FBI stories and this one sounds like it has a few clever twists. Thanks for the review.
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It certainly kept me engaged, Jacqui. I hope you enjoy it if you try it.
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Wow, this sounds like an excellent series starter, Staci. I don’t read a lot of procedurals, but the thought of a Christian procedural really appeals to me. I’m adding this to my TBR. Thanks for the insightful review!
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It ticked all the boxes for me, Mae. I think you’d enjoy it.
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I enjoy police procedurals too, Staci. This one sounds good – storyline and pace. And I’m glad it’s not overly romantic or preachy. Great review. Thanks!
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I feel the same way, Diana. Too much romance or too preachy a tone (or worse, both) lose my interest. This had a great balance.
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This sounds so good, Staci! It’s a book I think I’d enjoy. Off to check it out. Thank you for sharing!
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I think you’d like it, Jan. I’m glad my review spoke to you.
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This sounds like one I’d enjoy, Staci. Thanks for your thoughtful review.
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I think you’d really enjoy it, Joan.
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Hi Staci, I hope you are well. This sounds like an action packed book. I’m always astonished at how often serial killers and high school bullying comes up in Americal novels.
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I’m fine, Robbie. Thanks for asking. Hoping you and yours are well.
I think our society enjoys reading the things we most fear (so we can see the villains defeated). I know that’s why I read the works I do. I guess those aren’t things often addressed in your country. What do your mysteries and thrillers focus on?
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This sounds like a great read, Staci. I’m not much of a crime reader, but as you mentioned, the gore isn’t on the page, so I might give this a try. Thanks for the review!
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I mean, it’s definitely a crime story, but there isn’t anything awful on the page. And many people might consider it a romantic suspense (though I don’t think the romance is forward enough to drive the story). I’m glad my review intrigued you. Maybe try it and see if it’s to your liking? I can’t guarantee a non-crime-fiction fan will enjoy it as much as I did.
If you do try it, I’d love to know what you thought.
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I love the sound of this series, Staci. I enjoy Christian Fiction, but also Crime thrillers, so this sounds like a great mix. I also like that although there is romance, it doesn’t drive the story. I am off to see if my library carries this series.
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I hope it does, Carla. (I listened to the audiobook on Everand. I didn’t even think to check my library for it.)
If you enjoy the genre blend as much as I do, it’ll appeal to you on every level. I’d love to know what you think (if you read it).
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I have Everand as well, so will check there.
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Great. Enjoy!
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