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Pre-order XO, the new Kathryn Dance novel from Jeffery Deaver.
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This is an impressive addition to Deaver's much-praised sequence of novels about Lincoln and Amelia simply because they find themselves up against an equally intelligent killer with radically different ways of thinking. Their habits of logic and science and legwork are of limited use against someone who constantly stretches the limits of the improbable. Jeffrey Deaver has always been an ingenious thriller writer and this book returns to the sardonic wit of his earliest work as he too engages in endless trickery and confusion of our expectations. --Roz Kaveney --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Praise for Jeffery Deaver's novels
(: )'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 )
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Deaver is, without doubt, the Man with the Master Plot who puts layer upon layer of deceit and illusion, and who sends his reader to all the wrong corners. Forensic science and the world of the great illusionists are coming to together in a whirlwind that leaves the reader (to his or her delight) in utter bewilderness.
But there is also something amiss here. In his earlier novels Deaver was as much interested in the interplay between the protagonists - the quadriplegic Rhyme and his 'eyes on foot', Amelia Sachs - as in plotting and scheming. But the forensic part of their relationship is almost perfunctorily done with here, and their personal interplay doesn't develop at all. In fact, the main protagonist, Kara (an iiluusionist who's helping Rhyme with his investigations), is much more interesting than our heroes, and that leaves this novel rather uneven.
Besides, there is more than an echo of Carol O'Connell's brilliant themes about the world of crime & illusion (i.e. "Shellgame") than I would care to read, and, frankly, O'Connell is much, much better in this area.
Nevertheless, Deaver's latest is highly entertaining and certainly a must for his fans, and so much better than 'The Blue Nowhere'.
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