
Published by Ace on January 26, 2016
Graveyard is the third novel in the Mutant Files series.
When the body of a mutant who died from a botched face transplant is  dumped near a church, Det. Cassandra Lee gets the call. She investigates  that case while continuing her efforts (detailed in the first two  novels) to track down the serial killer called Bonebreaker, who may be  hiding in a mutant graveyard (hence the title). But first she has to  rescue the mayor, who has taken shelter from shells that the Aztec navy  is firing into Los Angeles as long-delayed payback for the  Mexican-American War. The Aztecs have also landed mutant troops in  California and Texas. Between the criminal gangs, the heavily armed  civilian population, and the Aztecs, Lee doesn’t know who will be  shooting at her next.
Lee is in a relationship with a  psychologist named Kane, although the relationship is threatened when,  after unlikely murder charges are brought against Kane (a street  shooting in self-defense), Lee learns that Kane was accused of murder  once before. The victim was Kane’s wife, prompting Lee to ask, “What  wife?”
The bones of a good novel are present in Graveyard, but  they are never given flesh. None of the plot threads have any emotional  heft. The Aztecs exist as a backdrop to create action scenes but they do  little to advance the novel. The Bonebreaker is a stock serial killer.  He lacks depth and, as serial killers go, he isn’t very interesting.  Neither the improbable political scandal that drives the plot nor Lee’s  domestic drama are well-developed. They both just fizzle out.
If  you’re a fan of dialog like “We need to get the killer off the street,  pronto!” you might like William Dietz’ prose style. The novel has the  feel of having been rushed to completion.
Dietz is a competent writer. The story is coherent and some aspects of the background are interesting. Unfortunately, the novel as a whole is not sufficiently interesting to earn my recommendation.
NOT RECOMMENDED