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![]() The Prey Series Sudden Prey Virgil Flowers The Kidd Series Other Novels Etcetera | Sudden Prey Booklist by Wes Lukowsky When backwoods Wisconsin bank robbers Candy and Georgie
LaChaise are gunned down, they leave an intense mourner in Dick LaChaise,
husband to Candy and brother to Georgie. On furlough from prison to attend the
funeral, LaChaise escapes into the Wisconsin countryside. He doesn't want
freedom, he wants revenge against the officers who shot his wife and brother,
one of whom is Lucas Davenport, the hero of Sandford's previous Prey
novels. What could have been a routine psycho-killer-on-the-prowl caper is
given a unique twist by the presence of a crooked cop, Stadic, whom LaChaise
bribes for information about his prey. Feeding information to both the good
guys and the baddies, Stadic jockeys for position, hoping to survive no matter
what happens. LaChaise is a memorable villain, a volatile mix of justified
grief and madness. And Lucas Davenport? He's the same steely-eyed warrior he's
always been, though here we realize that he has more in common with the
LaChaises of the world than he's willing to admit. Fans of previous Sandford
novels will be thrilled by the clever plotting and fully developed killers,
even though they may be disappointed that Davenport plays a relatively minor
role. Entertaining reading for thriller fans. Kirkus Reviews The fine and chilling eighth in Sandford's series featuring
top cop Lucas Davenport (Mind Prey, 1995,
etc.), this pitting him against a trio of revenge-minded killers. At the climax
of an afternoon stakeout in a mall crowded with Christmas shoppers, Davenport
(deputy chief of the Minneapolis PD) and a handpicked crew of officers gun down
Candy LaChaise and her sister-in-law Georgia just after they've robbed a credit
union. Candy's hardcase husband Dick, midway through a nine-year jail sentence,
is allowed to attend her funeral. With a little help from his friends
Bill Martin, a backwoodsman with a fondness for exotic weaponry, and Ansel
Butters, a substance-abusing Tennessean Dick murders his guard and melts
into the countryside. Eager to exact retribution, however, the vindictive
Martin and his confederates return to the Twin Cities, where, using IDs
supplied by Andy Stadic (a crooked vice cop), they begin liquidating the loved
ones of those involved in the credit-union shootout. With the public and press
in an uproar, Davenport calls on the considerable resources at his command to
stalk the homicidal threesome. Butters goes down, but with Stadic tipping them
off via cellular phone, LaChaise and Martin manage to remain at large, albeit
at no small cost in blood. Eventually, Sandy Darling (the ex-nurse they've
blackmailed into treating their wounds) is able to betray them to the
authorities. In near-blizzard conditions, then, a crossbow-wielding Martin is
shot on a downtown street while Davenport closes with LaChaise in a hospital
he's invaded in search of the doctor who's Davenport's live-in lover.
Meanwhile, Darling flees Stadic through the stands of an empty Metrodome.
Complete with gross cop humor and villains who, for all their vicious resolve,
have credibly redemptive traits: another winner for the accomplished Sandford
and his growing legion of fans. Library Journal The eighth Lucas Davenport adventure in John Sandford's
Prey series (e.g., Mind Prey, Putnam,
1995) opens with the Candy LaChaise gang's robbery of a Minnesota credit union.
When Candy is ambushed and killed by Davenport and his men, Candy's husband,
Dick LaChaise, swears vengeance on the spouses and families of all officers
involved. A series of attacks ensue in which spouses are killed at work. With
the lives of Davenport's own daughter and his fiancee threatened, he quickly
metamorphoses into a hunting machine himself. The reader is privy throughout to
the actions and plans of dirty cops and drug dealers, as well as a bumbling and
rather endearing side of Dick LaChaise. This tightly wound thriller is
action-packed, yet most of the characters are shadowy humans, lacking breath,
history, and motivation. Publishers Weekly The title tells it true, and applies not only to myriad
characters in Sandford's electrifying eighth Prey thriller, but also
to the novel's readers. From the opening scene, in which series hero,
Minneapolis cop Lucas Davenport, and his team stalk and kill a female bank
robber, the story will clamp down like a bear trap on all who open its covers.
That robber is Davenport's prey, but those beloved by the cop and his men
become prey in turn when the slain thief's husband, Dick LaChaise, and his two
sidekicks, all ex-bikers with militia mentalities, vow revenge unto death.
Davenport, who in his spare time designs computer games that have made him
wealthy, soon learns two disturbing facts: that suicidal enemies are close to
unstoppable, and that his addiction to this real-life "game" is powerful enough
to put even his loved ones at risk. Further problems ensue from the dangerous
presence of a crooked cop, and from the refusal by Davenport's lover, a
dedicated surgeon, to take up Davenport's offer to seclude her safely. The
stakes are high, the characters rich, the action relentless-here's a thriller
that will make your hair stand on end. |
13 May 2008 The Prey series, the Virgil Flowers series,
the Kidd series, The Night Crew, Dead Watch, The Eye
and the Heart: The Watercolors of John Stuart Ingle, and Plastic
Surgery: The Kindest Cut are copyrighted by John Sandford. All excerpts are
used with permission. All original content on the website (excluding the message
board and some other specifically disclaimed text) is copyright © 2008 by
Roswell Anthony Camp. Please do not steal anything from these pages. If you
want to borrow something, write and ask first. Help keep moofs happy. | |