Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Sheryl Scarborough continues the adventures of teen amateur sleuth and aspiring forensic scientist Erin Blake in To Right the Wrongs, the sequel to the mystery To Catch a Killer.
Barely three weeksafter catching the person who killed her mother, Erin is trying to return herlife to some semblance of normal. But soon she and her best friends Spam andLysa are once again up to their elbows in forensics projects--this time with the full approval of theirparents.
Under the guidanceof her FBI agent uncle Victor, Erin and her crew are prepping to be counselorsat their school's CSI summer camp. Meanwhile, Erin's super-hot new boyfriend JourneyMichaels takes a position as Victor's intern in the crime lab on campus, wherethey're going to take another look at the evidence in the murder trial thatsent Journey's father to prison. The girls are under strict orders not tomeddle with the murder case, but that's easier said than done...
Synopsis
Sheryl Scarborough continues the adventures of teen amateur sleuth and aspiring forensic scientist Erin Blake in To Right the Wrongs, the sequel to To Catch a Killer.
Erin Blake has one goal for summer vacation: leave behind her reputation as the girl whose mom was murdered, and just be normal girl enjoying her first real romance.
Unfortunately -- or maybe fortunately for a mystery fanatic -- her hot new boyfriend has an unsolved murder in his own past. When Journey was a baby, his father was convicted of the murder of a teenage runaway and sent to prison.
Journey barely remembers his father, but he's been researching the case and something doesn't add up. His father had no reason to kill anyone, much less a teenager, and he's always maintained his innocence. Journey's convinced he was framed.
Hopefully, he and Victor, the former FBI crime scene expert, will be able to prove it. But if Journey's father didn't do it, that means somebody else did-- and after getting away with it for sixteen years, that person could be more dangerous than ever.
So, Erin and her friends are under strict orders not to meddle in the case...but that's easier said than done.