Next book

THE STRANGLER

In between a slow start and a coda too cute, Landay (Mission Flats, 2003) shows a truly sizzling Boston.

Irish grief implodes in 1963 Boston.

The Daley boys dislike their father Joe Senior’s ex-partner, Brendan Conroy, who’s moved in on their mother within a year of their father’s death on the job. Is there a reason Brendan let Joe walk first down an alley into an ambush? How come the perp has never been found? That’s just the beginning of the Daley troubles. Joe Jr., a cop like his dad, has so much gambling debt that he’s forced to become a bagman for Vinny “The Animal” Gargano. Ricky, an upscale burglar, has drawn the ire of racketeer Capobianco by heisting diamonds from a swell who’s under his protection. And Michael, a functionary in the Attorney General’s Eminent Domain Division, has antagonized his boss by insisting that Albert DeSalvo, who’s confessed to being the Strangler who throttled 13 women, is just a publicity-seeking nut case. Even when Ricky’s reporter girlfriend Amy is murdered, with all the earmarks of a Strangler killing even though DeSalvo’s been in lockup, the A.G. still swears he did it, prompting Michael to investigate matters further. Coming up: more dead cops, more battles among crooks and a Strangler-like murder on the other side of the country.

In between a slow start and a coda too cute, Landay (Mission Flats, 2003) shows a truly sizzling Boston.

Pub Date: Feb. 6, 2007

ISBN: 0-385-33615-2

Page Count: 400

Publisher: Delacorte

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 2006

Next book

THE INNOCENT WIFE

A grim and unbearably tense debut chiller with an unexpected and utterly fitting finale.

A lonely British schoolteacher falls for an American man incarcerated for the murder of a young woman. What could possibly go wrong?

Samantha, 31, is still reeling from a bad breakup when she discovers Framing the Truth: The Murder of Holly Michaels, an 18-year-old true-crime documentary about the killing of a young girl by then-18-year-old Dennis Danson, aka the suspected Red River Killer, who’s still on death row in Florida’s Altoona Prison. Sam writes to Dennis, and soon they’re declaring their love for each other. Sam flies to the U.S. to meet him, and although they’re separated by plexiglass, she knows that she’s found the love of her life. The chirpy Carrie, who co-produced and directed the first documentary, is Sam’s guide while she’s there, and Sam accompanies her while they film a new series about Dennis, A Boy from Red River. Sam and Dennis quickly marry when new evidence comes to light and Dennis is exonerated and released. Amid a whirlwind of talk shows, celebrity attention, and the new series premiere, married life isn’t quite what Sam had hoped for: intimacy is nonexistent, the already self-loathing Sam feels unloved and unwanted, and the appearance of Dennis’ clingy childhood friend Lindsay Durst sends Sam into a jealous fit. After Dennis’ father dies, they move into Dennis’ childhood home, and Sam begins to suspect he may be hiding something. After all, what actually happened to all those other missing girls? Refreshingly, Lloyd seems absolutely unconcerned with whether or not her characters are likable, and although a few British sayings ("round," “in hospital”) make their way into the dialogue of the American characters, her research into the aftereffects of long incarceration is obvious, and her portrait of an emotionally damaged woman feels spot-on.

A grim and unbearably tense debut chiller with an unexpected and utterly fitting finale.

Pub Date: Feb. 6, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-335-95240-0

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Hanover Square Press

Review Posted Online: Dec. 23, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2018

Next book

THE TROOP

Readers may wish to tackle this heart-pounding novel in highly populated, well-lit areas—snacks optional.

Some thrillers produce shivers, others trigger goose bumps; Cutter’s graphic offering will have readers jumping out of their skins.

Scoutmaster Dr. Tim Riggs takes his troop for their annual camping trip to Falstaff Island, an uninhabited area not far from their home on Prince Edward Island. The five 14-year-old boys who comprise Troop 52 are a diverse group: popular school jock, Kent, whose father is the chief of police; best friends Ephraim and Max, one the son of a petty thief who’s serving time in prison and the other the son of the coroner who also serves as the local taxidermist; Shelley, an odd loner with a creepy proclivity for animal torture and touching girls’ hair; and Newton, the overweight nerdy kid who’s the butt of the other boys’ jokes. When a skeletal, voracious, obviously ill man shows up on the island the first night of their trip, Tim’s efforts to assist him unleash a series of events which the author describes in gruesome, deliciously gory detail. Tom Padgett is the subject of a scientific test gone horribly wrong, or so it seems, and soon, the Scouts face a nightmare that worms its way into the group and wreaks every kind of havoc imaginable. With no way to leave the island (the boat Tom arrived on is disabled, and the troop was dropped off by a different boat), the boys fight to survive. Cutter’s narrative of unfolding events on the island is supplemented with well-placed interviews, pages from diaries, and magazine and newspaper articles, which provide answers to the reader in bits and pieces—but perhaps more importantly, it also delivers much-needed respites from the intense narrative as the boys battle for their lives on the island. Cutter (who created this work under a pseudonym) packs a powerful punch by plunging readers into gut-wrenching, explicit imagery that’s not for the faint of heart or the weak of stomach.  

Readers may wish to tackle this heart-pounding novel in highly populated, well-lit areas—snacks optional.

Pub Date: Feb. 25, 2014

ISBN: 978-1-4767-1771-5

Page Count: 368

Publisher: Gallery Books/Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: Sept. 17, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 2013

Close Quickview