Happy Monday, Friends!
Hope you had a great bookish weekend. I’m sharing a book review on Natalie Walter’s latest release, Fatal Code. It’s out live in the world so grab a copy. Oh and if you haven’t read book one, do so because it’s awesome. It’s not necessary in order to read book two (Fatal Code) but it is a must read on its own.
About the Book

In 1964, a group of scientists called the Los Alamos Five came close to finishing a nuclear energy project for the United States government when they were abruptly disbanded. Now the granddaughter of one of those five scientists, aerospace engineer Elinor Mitchell, discovers that she has highly sensitive information on the project in her possession–and a target on her back.
SNAP agent and former Navy cryptologist Kekoa Young is tasked with monitoring Elinor. This is both convenient since she’s his neighbor in Washington, DC, and decidedly inconvenient because . . . well, he kind of likes her.
As Elinor follows the clues her grandfather left behind to a top-secret nuclear project, Kekoa has no choice but to step in. When Elinor learns he has been spying on her, she’s crushed. But with danger closing in on all sides, she’ll have to trust him to ensure her discoveries stay out of enemy hands.
Natalie Walters sucks you into the global race for space domination in this perfectly paced second installment of her SNAP Agency romantic suspense series.
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My Review

I couldn’t wait to read Fatal Code since I enjoyed Lights Out so much. In that book we’re introduced to Kekoa and his personality is larger than enough and filled with great humor. So I expected to see that.
What we got was a larger than life guy, but one who also had hidden wounds and insecurity. Couple that with a genius heroine and suspense and intrigue and you had a story that pulled you in.
There was so much to enjoy about this book and I can’t wait to see what Natalie Walters has for us in book 3.
Have you read the story? Let me know your thoughts in the comments.
*I received a complimentary copy from the publisher via NetGalley. My review was not required nor influenced.