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The Sleeping Doll [Paperback]

Jeffery Deaver
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (40 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 560 pages
  • Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton; First printing of this edition edition (24 July 2008)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0340833866
  • ISBN-13: 978-0340833865
  • Product Dimensions: 11.2 x 3.7 x 17.9 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (40 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 357 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Jeffery Deaver
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Product Description

Review

Praise for Jeffery Deaver's other novels

(: )

'There's no question...about Deaver's unexcelled ability to pull the wool over your eyes. When he describes a colorless, odorless glass of liquid as water, don't assume it is until somebody drinks it down - or maybe till an hour later.' (Kirkus Reviews on THE TWELFTH CARD )

'The best psychological thriller writer around' (The Times )

'The most creative, skilled and intriguing thriller writer in the world . . . [Deaver] has produced a stunning series of bestsellers with unique characterisation, intelligent characters, beguiling plots and double-barrelled and sometimes triple-barrelled solutions.' (Daily Telegraph )

'This is a novel that will chill your blood on the warmest day of any summer holiday. Keep looking over your shoulder...'

(Independent on Sunday )

'Jeffery Deaver is a master at crafting intricate crimes that are solved through guile, tenacity and sheer creative genius. And Lincoln Rhyme is one of a kind.'

(Harlan Coben ) --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

'This is a novel that will chill your blood on the warmest day of any summer holiday. Keep looking over your shoulder...'

(Independent on Sunday )

'The best psychological thriller writer around' (The Times )

'Jeffery Deaver is a master at crafting intricate crimes that are solved through guile, tenacity and sheer creative genius.'

(Harlan Coben )

'There's no question . . . about Deaver's unexcelled ability to pull the wool over your eyes. When he describes a colorless, odorless glass of liquid as water, don't assume it is until somebody drinks it down - or maybe till an hour later.'

(Kirkus Reviews on THE TWELFTH CARD )

'The most creative, skilled and intriguing thriller writer in the world . . . [Deaver] has produced a stunning series of bestsellers with unique characterisation, intelligent characters, beguiling plots and double-barrelled and sometimes triple-barrelled solutions.' (Daily Telegraph )

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
49 of 52 people found the following review helpful
Readable, but flawed 29 July 2007
By G. J. Oxley TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
In this, the first of a new series, Deaver brings back Californian Special Agent Kathryn Dance - a kinesics expert (basically she's a walking lie detector and expert in body language) - who had a cameo in his last Lincoln Rhyme novel 'The Cold Moon'

A murderous cult leader named Daniel Pell escapes from prison after years inside and the majority of this book explores his motivations and actions and the efforts of the law enforcement agencies (with Dance to the fore) to re-apprehend him.

Dance plays the Lincoln Rhyme role here, attempting to out-think Pell and predict what he'll do next.

She does this by gaining insights into his psychology from a series of interviews with those who've had previous contact with him. They include three female members of the cult he led before his incarceration and the young girl he overlooked when murdering a moneyed family in their home: the `Sleeping Doll' of the title.

Without wishing to give anything of the subsequent plot away, Deaver challenges your perceptions by turning situation after situation on its head with some skilful (and sometimes not so skilful) misdirection.

Jeff's stock-in-trade is the outrageous twist, and he's capable of delivering these with more aplomb than anyone else operating in the crime thriller field. And his characterisation is usually way above average too.

But some of his famous twists are a bit laboured here. If, like me, you've read everything he's written in both the shorter and longer formats, you'll find some of them a bit obvious. Which doesn't mean to say you still won't admire the way he pulls them off.

Another negative is that although Kathryn Dance emerges as a fully-formed character, she's just not very interesting, and Jeff struggles to breathe life into her. Her particular schtick, although potentially fascinating, doesn't seem 100% credible either, and on the whole she pales in comparison when placed next to his greatest creation, the irascible genius Lincoln Rhyme.

At the book's closure he acknowledges the sources that formed his background reading into Dance's area of expertise. And although the whole body language thing seems a bit unconvincing, he skilfully weaves his research into the narrative with nary a lapse into psychobabble.

And full marks to the writer for trying to create a new type of investigator here; you can't accuse him of lacking ambition!

In summary, despite some tedious moments and the occasional meandering passage, this is solid enough fare with something for both old fans and neophytes alike.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
I am ambivalent about this first book in the Kathryn Dance series, similar to how I felt about its sequel. In this she is on the trail of escaped prisoner Daniel Pell, a murderer who seems able to brainwash people into helping him.

While the concepts of the two main characters are really interesting, Dance as the kinesics (body-language) expert and Pell as the mind-controlling evil-doer, the plot and the writing style just fail to bear the weight.

Unlike a traditional mystery story, there's no opening for the reader to work things out - every twist comes completely out of the blue, and I found that to be really frustrating. Deaver also has a habit of ending chapters on suggestive cliff-hangers, only to change direction immediately after the break, completely ruining the suspense he has built up.

The narration is opinionated, which seems very strange presentation. If it was aligned with a character, as many other authors do, then this style would make sense but presented as the opinion of a faceless third person narrative it is jarring and rips focus away from the story.

Finally it is too complicated - there's more going on than is needed to tell the story, and particularly at the end where Deaver throws in some unexpected and ultimately unnecessary twists that just cause it to feel dragged out. I'm all for tying up loose ends but these ends weren't even there up to this point.

Overall I probably shouldn't have bothered after my experience reading the sequel. I can only hope that Deaver's attempt at a James Bond novel later this year turns out more satisfactorily.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Bring Back Lincoln 31 Aug 2008
Format:Paperback
I too was disappointed with this. I'm a great fan of the Lincoln Rhyme books and was really looking forward to this. Unfortunately, the characters were not that engaging and the twists, normally a key element in the Rhyme novels and one of his greatest specialities, could either be seen coming from a mile of or just seemed shoe horned into the story for the sake of adding more twists. I also thought the book dragged on for a good 50 or so too many pages.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
thrilling!
I had fancied this book from first reading about it for 2 reasons; I like Jeffrey Deaver and I thought that the title and introduction of Kathryn Dance was intriguing - and I was... Read more
Published 12 months ago by C. BROWN
Excellent Deaver
The Sleeping Doll is the first of Jeffrey Deaver's Kathryn Dance series. Special Agent Kathryn Dance, a brilliant interrogator and kinesics expert with the California Bureau of... Read more
Published 13 months ago by Cloggie Downunder
Tedious, repetitive and poorly written
This is the first novel I've attempted to read of Jeffery Deaver's, and it shall be my last. I couldn't wade beyond the 1st 100 pages despite a valiant effort. Read more
Published 20 months ago by Xander
"Top Quality"
This book is one of Deavers finest, compelling from start to finish with unpredictable twists and turns. Read more
Published 22 months ago by Reader1
nobody does it better
To my mind Jeffrey Deaver is always good value for money. It is true that I've enjoyed some of his stories more than others but overall they inevitably fall into a class I would... Read more
Published on 27 April 2010 by I. B. Pitbladdo
Look forward to more Kathryn Dance novels
I have always enjoyed Deaver's Lincoln Rhyme novels and enjoyed the character of Kathryn Dance when she appeared in Cold Moon so was delighted to see Deaver had given this... Read more
Published on 21 Mar 2010 by L. Barnet
no cliche left unused
This is a truly bad book. Poorly written and poorly edited. Utterly predictable, and cluttered with more cliches than a footballer's interview. Read more
Published on 6 Mar 2010 by E. A. N. Otway
Can do better?
I read of Jeffry Deaver's high reputation in the field of crime-writing and this is the first of his books I've tried. Read more
Published on 5 Sep 2009 by Mr. M. Neligan
fab
The first Jeffrey Deaver book I read [the cold moon] featured Kathryn Dance and I loved the character. Read more
Published on 17 May 2009 by Suze
Not a satisfying Deaver read
I've read a number of Jeffrey Deaver books. They typically focus on a lone investigator (or department head) as he (or she in this case) investigates a crime. Read more
Published on 12 April 2009 by J. Bowen
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