The Setup
Look, I'll be honest. I started this one on a Tuesday morning jog through Cambridge, mostly because I needed something fast-paced to distract me from the fact that my legs were screaming at me to stop. And Cora Shields? She delivered. Former Navy SEAL, FBI agent, painkiller addiction, depression—the protagonist exhibits classic "wounded warrior" syndrome, and I found myself immediately asking: is this going to be a nuanced exploration of trauma, or just trauma as aesthetic?
The answer is... somewhere in the middle. (My therapist would have thoughts about this character, honestly.)
The Psychology That Works (And What Doesn't)
Here's the thing about Cora Shields as a character study. Blake Pierce clearly understands the surface-level markers of someone spiraling—the addiction, the self-destructive tendencies, the need to prove herself through increasingly reckless behavior. What makes this character compelling is that she's not trying to be likeable. She's messy. She makes terrible decisions. She goes vigilante because she literally has nothing left to lose, and that tracks psychologically.
But—and this is where I got a little twitchy—the internal logic sometimes wobbles. Cora's supposed to be deeply depressed and addicted, but she functions at this superhuman level when the plot needs her to. One minute she's barely holding it together, the next she's executing complex tactical maneuvers without breaking a sweat. The research actually shows that addiction and depression don't just... pause... when things get exciting. They're always there, dragging at you. Pierce gestures at this but doesn't fully commit.
That said, the vigilante angle is a fascinating case study in moral flexibility. When does "doing whatever it takes" become its own kind of addiction? When does the ends-justify-the-means thinking become indistinguishable from the criminals you're hunting? Pierce doesn't dig as deep as I'd like, but the questions are there if you're paying attention.
Emma Gould's Performance
Okay, so Emma A. Gould. She's got this clear, no-nonsense English accent that I wasn't expecting for an American thriller, but somehow it works? It gives Cora this detached, almost clinical quality that actually fits the character's emotional walls. The woman has been through hell and she's not about to let you see her cry—Gould captures that perfectly.
The pacing is tight. Like, really tight. This is a 5-hour-15-minute audiobook that moves at a sprint, and Gould keeps up without ever sounding breathless or rushed. She knows when to slow down for the emotional beats and when to let the action sequences fly. The character voices are consistent—I never lost track of who was speaking, which sounds basic but honestly? So many narrators fumble this.
What I particularly appreciated was her handling of Cora's darker moments. There's this scene where Cora's alone, confronting her own demons, and Gould doesn't oversell it. No dramatic sobbing, no theatrical whispers. Just this quiet, controlled desperation that felt... real. That's harder to do than it sounds.
The Listening Experience
I burned through this in two days. Morning jog, evening cooking session (I made dal makhani, ate it alone, no pity necessary), and then finished it during a late-night bout of insomnia because I couldn't stop. The breakneck pace is both a feature and a bug—you're never bored, but you're also never given time to really sit with anything.
The conspiracy plot goes deeper than I expected. I won't spoil it, but there are some genuine twists that caught me off guard. (And I read mystery novels like case studies, so that's saying something.) The cross-state chase keeps the momentum going, though by the end I was a little exhausted. In a good way? Mostly.
Content warning: there's violence, some abuse themes, language, and sexual content. If you're sensitive to any of that, maybe not the best bedtime listen. I'd say this is ideal for workouts or commutes—something where you want your brain fully occupied but you're also doing something physical to burn off the tension.
Who This Is For
If you're looking for literary fiction or slow-burn psychological depth, this isn't it. Psychologically, some things don't quite track if you scrutinize too hard. But if you want a fast, engaging thriller with a complicated female protagonist who makes questionable choices? This is your jam.
Best for: fans of the vigilante justice genre, people who devoured the Jack Reacher series, anyone who wants their audiobook to feel like an action movie. Skip if: you need your character psychology to be airtight, or if you prefer your thrillers with more quiet dread than constant motion.
I'm probably going to listen to book two. (Yes, I know I said I'd stop buying thriller series, but here we are.) The Cora Shields character has potential, and I want to see if Pierce lets her get messier or cleans her up for mass appeal.
My bet's on messier. I hope I'm right.






