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Book Review: A Degree to Die For (University Police) by Karis Walsh

A Degree to Die For by Karis Walsh is a contemporary romance and the second book in the University Police series. I did not read the first book in the series, and spent a good portion of the book trying to figure out if I had. I was still able to enjoy this read, but I thing returning readers will enjoy the seeing the returning characters.

Tig Weston’s beloved classics department is evolving, expanding its course offerings to entice a new and more diverse generation of students. Not everyone is willing to accept these changes, though. Tempers flare, and when the body of a prestigious alum turns up outside Denny Hall, Tig doubts she can bring her department through the crisis. Sergeant Adriana Kent always pictured classical scholars as tweedy bookworms, but suddenly her campus police officers are being called to Denny on a near-daily basis. Arguments in the halls, threatening emails, and even a fistfight, for God’s sake. What should have been the most sedate department on campus seems to be going through a volatile transformation. And the most visible proponent of that transformation? The decidedly unstuffy and very sexy Professor Antigone Weston. Kent and Tig seem to be on opposing sides in this battle until the stakes become more personal. But before they can even think about a future together, they’ll need to fight to protect the campus from a killer.

A Degree to Die For is balanced well between the romance and mystery. The two are wound together well, and it never felt like to different aspects of the story were at odds. I enjoyed the secondary characters and setting a great deal, and while some seemed familiar, and I spent a good amount of time trying to remember if I had read the first book in the series, the circle of friends is one I would love to be a part of. I thought the development of the relationship between Tig and Kent was well done. Some readers might not like that we got different points of view through the book, but I found knowing why certain decisions were made and perceptions of more than just Tig and Kent brought everything into focus. I will say that I had figured out the big bad fairly early on, but I still enjoyed the ride as everyone one in the book worked their way to the same answer. 

A Degree to Die For is an engaging read, and I look forward to what might happen next.

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