Full description not available
K**R
Unusual circumstances
Is Lincoln Rhyme going to be a successful criminalist in North Carolina where he knows nothing of the land customs or people? Will he have the operation he traveled there to have? Does Amelia Sachs, his partner and assistant, fall by the wayside in this strange little backwater of a village on the edge of the dismal swamp. The characters are wonderfully eccentric from the insect loving teenager Garrett to the good old boys in the Sheriff's department and the lone female deputy Lucy Kerr. Then when everything seems resolved there's still more twists in the story. Great story!
S**D
Twists And Turns Galore
Lincoln Rhyme, renowned forensic criminalist and a quadriplegic, has come from New York City where he knows the environment to North Carolina, a massive culture and environmental shift. He has come to a notable medical center where promising surgery has been done on others in his condition with some improvements in their quality of life. Of course, with his condition, he never travels alone. He is accompanied by his partner and lover, Amelia Sachs and his constant medical assistant, Thomas.While he is waiting through the pre-surgical tests and scheduling, the local sheriff turns up. He has heard that the famous Lincoln Rhyme is in town and he needs help. Two women have been kidnapped and a man has been killed. The whole town is sure they know who the culprit is. Garrett Hanlon is a sixteen year old boy, known as Insect Boy, for his fascination with insects. He is an orphan, his family having been killed in a car accident. His time in foster care has not been pleasant and he is suspected of many crimes in the area. Now he has disappeared with both a young college student who was on a historical dig and a nurse who was also in the area. Local law enforcement feels they need more expertise to solve a crime this complicated and they prevail on Lincoln. Restless as he waits for treatment, he agrees to give the local police force his assistance.Rhyme is at a disadvantage. He has left behind his lab, where he has every forensic instrument he could ever need. His expertise in in items found in a city, not a rural North Carolina town with bogs and swamps and flora and fauna he has never encountered. Amelia heads up a search team and as she and the deputies go in pursuit, things get more complicated than either Rhyme or Sachs could ever have imagined.This is the third novel in the Lincoln Rhyme series. Rhyme is one of the most fascinating detectives currently being written about and the reader is easily drawn back into the world of forensic science and its role in solving impossible cases. There are plenty of the twists and turns Deaver fans have come to expect and a surprising ending. This book is recommended for mystery readers.
I**E
A Fish Out Of Water
In Tanner’s Corner, NC, Garrett Hanlon, 16 years old, orphaned and essentially feral, has allegedly killed Billy Stail with a shovel and has allegedly kidnapped Mary Beth McConnell. He has allegedly put a county deputy into a life-threatening coma using the stings of hundreds of yellow jackets. And we know for a fact, no “allegedly” about it, that he has kidnapped Lydia Johansson.Coincidental to the entire series of crimes, Lincoln Rhyme, Amelia Sachs and Thom arrive at UNC’s medical center, located only a few miles from Tanner’s Corner. Lincoln is scheduled for major spinal surgery, a procedure that Amelia has serious doubts about. Angry with Amelia for questioning his decision, Lincoln is even angrier when she walks into the doctor’s office with a local law enforcement officer.Jim Bell is the sheriff of Paquenoke County, where the murder, kidnappings and assault have just taken place. He is also the cousin of Roland Bell, one of the two NYPD detectives that Rhyme works with on a regular basis as an expert forensics consultant. Bell has come, hat in hand, to beg Rhyme for help. His county is poor, with no crime lab of its own, and his police force is now understaffed and over-tasked.Amelia is all for it, presumably to get Rhyme away from the hospital. Thom is completely against it, as he has limited medical equipment with him to help Rhyme with the physical rigors of an investigation. But Rhyme, after his initial snit over the disruption subsides, sees the threads of a puzzle that needs solving. So Rhyme agrees to help Sheriff Bell for two days, the time he has until his surgery is to take place.As the flush of joy over having a new puzzle to solve fades, Rhyme realizes that he is at a considerable disadvantage here, and not because he’s a quadriplegic. He is totally ignorant of his surroundings, knowing nothing about the soil, the water, the air or the people here. He is out of his natural element and Garrett Hanlon is not. For Garrett has taken his captives into his own territory, the sweaty, nasty bogs on the edge of the Great Dismal Swamp.Scant evidence exists to aide Rhyme and Sachs in their search. The primary and secondary scenes have been trampled and mangled by a police force inadequately trained in CSI. Private citizens have made things both worse and dangerous as they hunt the boy, not just to find the kidnapped women but for the reward. And one of the deputies has gone rogue, defying orders from the sheriff, intent on killing the boy for the present wrongs and for acts he legally skated on several years earlier.But Rhyme and Sachs prevail, Garrett Hanlon is caught, the second woman kidnapped is rescued, the deputy’s killing spree is thwarted. The only thing that remains is to find the first girl kidnapped. Then you realize that you are barely one-third of the way into the book, and that is far too soon for the plot to be at this point of completion. Perhaps “alleged,” that word those criminal defense attorneys so irritatingly insist upon, really means something here.Sure enough, as the old saying goes, the plot thickens. And by the halfway mark, Deaver will metaphorically shove the knife through both Rhyme’s and the reader’s shoulder blades. He will viciously twist that knife and leave you to wonder just how Rhyme and Sachs can possibly survive physically, emotionally and legally.However, Deaver is not through here. He is not going to let this twist play out logically to its conclusion. He is going to twist and twist and twist yet again. By the time you are two chapters from the end of the book – and it’s a long book – you will just know that if Deaver twists that story arc one more time, even one more degree, you will most certainly have either a coronary or a stroke. The suspense is that intense.In building that suspense, be aware that Deaver makes use of a great many stereotypes as he plays out the investigation. The story takes place in rural North Carolina so Deaver utilizes stereotypes about Southerners and Northerners, about city cops and rural cops, about women and blacks and crips. And just as he paints some characters with the black brushes of these stereotypes, he uses events and other characters to lay some of those images low and to intimate why stereotypes exist in the first place.But what Deaver doesn’t do is make it easy to figure out how it’s all going to play out. Just when you think you know who the bad guys are, you find out that you don’t know squat or you find out you don’t know the half of how bad they really are. The only characters whose moral compass you can count on are those of Rhyme, Sachs and Thom. And with trust being in such short supply, the lives of each of them, even Thom, is not guaranteed as long as anyone in their vicinity carries either a gun, a knife, a syringe or a quick fist. Quite frankly, this is an intense page-turner and a psychological stressor right to the very last page.
S**S
Way below the standard of the first two Rhyme novels
Did Jeffery Deaver even write this? I'm 25 pages in and already there's a glaring error where Rhyme states something about the new case that he couldn't possibly have known yet ("You know who the perp is, you know where he lives" - no one said any of that) and another where the author seems to forget that throughout the first book Rhyme was trying to organise his own suicide ("what had stopped [Rhyme] from finding some Jack Kevorkian to help with his assisted suicide" - except he HAD found someone). This reads like poorly researched fan fiction so far. I'm not the kind of person who looks out for mistakes so the fact I've already noticed two doesn't give me much hope for the rest of the book.
N**L
The best Lincoln Rhyme book
I loved the North Carolina setting which made the book for me. I liked the stories about the insects too which I never thought I would.There were some brilliant twists and it was a proper whodunnit also.By far the best of the Lincoln Rhyme books for me.
R**H
Normally with a series like this I find the following books just don't have ...
Normally with a series like this I find the following books just don't have the same impact as the first. This is not the case with Jeffery Deaver's "The empty chair" I was enthralled from begging to end with a fast paced all action story line which managed to surprise and delight. The characters come to life from Lincoln Rhyme and Amelia Sachs who we already know from the earlier books to the new cast including the countryside around the Paquenoke river and how Lincoln and Amelia cope with being in unfamiliar territory.The twists and turns kept me guessing, who did what and why. Brilliant
M**S
Lukewarm thriller.
My second Rhyme novel (skipped Bone Collector). The premise is that Rhyme and Sachs get involved in a kidnap/murder case in a different state which appears clear cut however the web of lies in the close knit community leads you on an intriguing journey to uncover the truth. I was kept interested but the novel lacked a little punch and excitement. The ending was a little 'murder she wrote' as the bad guys explained their every move and motives. Just an okay novel for me.
M**G
Excellent.
Books one and two in this series developed a number of solid characters and an extremely well sculpted landscape upon which the riveting story lines unfold and reach their thrilling climaxes. Quite a hard act to follow, but Deaver has achieved a completely different setting, populated with new and interesting characters - along with the familiar band of heroes - making this a refreshingly different and exciting take on a familiar theme.
ترست بايلوت
منذ 3 أيام
منذ شهر