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Longer Than A New York Minute: A Samantha Wright Crime Series #3

Book Review

Theresa Janson’s Longer Than a New York Minute is a crime novel wrapped tightly around a love story, a family story, and a story about healing after violence. Samantha Wright Little Bear is no longer living the FBI life that once defined her, but she hasn’t lost the instincts that made her a profiler. Now she’s a wife, mother, counselor, writer, and advocate on the reservation, trying to build the kind of life she and Will keep calling “simple and real.”

The mystery begins with the death of Tad Collins, a wealthy New Yorker who had become chosen family to Sam and Will. What’s first labeled a suicide doesn’t sit right with Sam, especially once she and Will look closer. Her grief sharpens rather than clouds her judgment, and the investigation gives the book its procedural backbone. When Sam says, “He was murdered Will,” the story shifts from sorrow into purpose.

What makes the book feel personal is how much of it lives in the everyday rhythms around the case. There are meals, babies, horses, family routines, anniversaries, and quiet conversations at the lodge pole. Janson gives Sam and Will’s marriage a lot of room on the page, and their intimacy is part of how they communicate, grieve, reconnect, and steady each other. The result is a novel where romance isn’t a subplot tucked beside the crime; it’s part of the engine.

The book also spends serious time with abuse, trauma, and the difficult work of helping people who may not be ready or able to leave danger behind. Sam’s counseling work with abused women gives the story moral weight, and it connects back to the dedication in a meaningful way. This isn’t just a murder investigation about one victim; it’s about how violence spreads through families and communities, and how people like Sam try to interrupt it one person at a time.

Longer Than a New York Minute is best read as a continuation of a deeply established emotional world. It’s intimate, protective, grief-struck, sensual, and family-centered, with the mystery acting as one strand in a larger portrait of survival and commitment. The book’s heart is Sam and Will’s chosen life together, and the crime plot matters because it threatens the people, peace, and hard-won sense of home they’ve built.

Pages: 200