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| The Prey Series Phantom Prey Virgil Flowers The Kidd Series Other Novels Etcetera | Phantom Prey Booklist Frances Austin is a missing heiress. Traces of blood in her
well-connected mother Alyssa's home lead Lucas Davenport, head of Minnesota's
Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, to assume the worst, but without a body, he
can't be sure. The investigation centers on Frances' involvement in the Twin
Cities' goth community. The goths' collective obsession with death and darkness
makes them an obvious starting point, but Davenport believes it's a form of
youthful angst rather than an inherently evil social trend. But when other
young goths connected to Frances are murdered, Davenport is forced to rethink
his theory. Like all good investigators, he follows the money, in this case, a
$50,000 withdrawal from Frances' account and its subsequent disbursement over a
20-day period preceding Frances' disappearance. When Davenport is wounded
coming out of a goth club after conducting a series of background interviews,
he realizes he's closing in on the killer but has no idea who or why. The
eighteenth entry in the best-selling Prey series is Sandford's usual
mix of clever plotting, gallows humor, and explosive action, but this time he
mixes in a bit of the seemingly supernatural. Davenport doesn't realize it and
neither will readers but he's actually working on two cases. The solution to
one is mundanely tragic; the second genuinely disturbing. Expect another trip
to the best-seller lists for one of the most consistently entertaining crime
writers working today. Kirkus Reviews Lucas Davenport goes after a clever, ruthless killer hiding in
plain sight. Widowed heiress Alyssa Austin, a former athlete who owns a string
of athletic clubs, comes home one night to find her daughter Frances missing,
with bloody signs of foul play. The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension
soon learns that Frances, a Goth girl who inherited $2 million from her father,
withdrew $50,000 from her bank account recently. Where did Frances and the
money go? While Lucas and his teammates try to track the cash or any goods or
services Frances might have purchased, more bodies pile up: a bartender friend
of Frances, a buddy of his who works at a liquor store, a Goth realtor. Lucas
doesn't know that these aren't victims of Frances's killer but of an unlikely
pair bent on avenging Frances: a spectral Goth who calls herself Fairy and
Loren, her lover and confederate their partnership is perhaps a bit too
indebted to the felonious duo of Invisible
Prey (2007). Sandford enlivens the cross-cutting between cops and
killers by giving Lucas another job: staking out pregnant Heather Toms while
she waits for her husband, dangerous drug dealer Siggy Toms, to come back from
Florida for her. This second gig would be a lot more tedious if Heather didn't
keep changing her clothes without bothering to lower the blinds. Of the many
obstacles that keep Frances's murder open, the most interesting is the news
that her avenger is a figure close to the investigation who can disperse
disinformation and still pass unsuspected among the authorities. The use of
multiple-personality disorder to explain away murderous motives is both
gratuitous and unconvincing, and it's no surprise when the most exciting
sequence is provided by the Heather Toms subplot. As usual, there are lots of
moves by both good guys and bad, but this time the moves seem old and
forced. Publishers Weekly In bestseller Sandford's solid 18th Prey novel (after
Invisible Prey), Minnesota Bureau of Criminal
Apprehension agent Lucas Davenport, who's received numerous promotions in the
course of the series, ought to be taking the desk aspects of his job more
seriously. But the man remains more comfortable working a stakeout,
interviewing suspects and taking down bad guys than he is filling out personnel
evaluation forms on his staff which explains why he's still getting shot
at, peeping at a cocaine dealer's wife hoping for a glimpse of her husband and,
at his wife's behest, looking into the unsolved kidnapping and presumed murder
of a wealthy young woman into the goth scene. It becomes clear that a serial
killer is targeting goths as well as anyone, including Lucas, who gets in the
way. While some pretty murky psychology encumbers the plot, Sandford delivers
the kind of riveting action that keeps thriller fans turning the pages. |
1 December 2010 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 © 2011 by
Roswell Anthony Camp. Please do not steal anything from these pages. If you
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