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Eyes of prey  Cover Image E-book E-book

Eyes of prey

Sandford, John, 1944- (Author). Berkley Books. (Publisher).

Summary: Lt. Lucas Davenport, the heroic detective introduced in Rules of Prey, faces his most terrifying case when a series of gruesome mutilation killings shocks Minneapolis. Davenport's case will either bring him back to life--or send him over the edge.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781101146231
  • ISBN: 1101146230
  • ISBN: 9780786507009
  • ISBN: 0786507004
  • ISBN: 9780425214435
  • ISBN: 0425214435
  • Physical Description: 1 online resource.
  • Publisher: New York : Berkley, 2001.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Unabridged.
Source of Description Note:
Description based title details screen.
Subject: Davenport, Lucas -- (Fictitious character) -- Fiction
Davenport, Lucas -- (Fictitious character)
Minneapolis Metropolitan Area (Minn.) -- Fiction
Saint Paul Metropolitan Area (Minn.) -- Fiction
FICTION -- Thrillers -- General
Minnesota -- Minneapolis Metropolitan Area
Minnesota -- Saint Paul Metropolitan Area
Genre: Horror fiction.
Electronic books.
Thrillers (Fiction)
Fiction.
Horror fiction.
Mystery fiction.
Thrillers (Fiction)

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Monthly Selections - #1 March 2000
    Minnesota-born supermodel Alie'e Maison is back in Minneapolis for a photo shoot. At the raucous wrap party, she turns up dead. Lucas Davenport, the millionaire homicide specialist who often corrals serial killers, is called to the scene. What initially appears to be a straightforward crime of passion--Alie'e was strangled after having sex (with a woman)--becomes much more complex when a second body, hotel concierge Sandy Lansing is found stuffed in a closet. Maison's international stature ignites a media circus, muddying Davenport's investigation. There are a dozen potential killers ranging from jilted lovers to dope dealers to Alie'e's born-again brother. The latest entry in the wildly successful Prey series contains all the elements fans have come to expect: solid plot, gallows humor, tasteful sex, and the likable, self-assured Davenport. If there's a bone to pick here, it's that the identity of the killer seems to come out of left field. Or maybe the plot was clever enough to completely fool at least one reader. Overall, this is an involving and very enjoyable thriller. ((Reviewed March 1, 2000)) Copyright 2000 Booklist Reviews
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2000 March #2
    This well-regarded series of police procedurals (Certain Prey, 1999, etc.) continues as Lucas Davenport, deputy chief of the Minneapolis PD, hunts a double murderer whose brutal crime sparks a series of deaths that may or may not be revenge killings. Sandford s 11th, however, owes more to Jerry Springer than Ed McBain. Two families vie for honors as most dysfunctional. There are the Olsons, small-towners who push their beauty-queen daughter Sharon (rechristened by the media as Alie e Maison) into the high-fashion world of sex, drugs, and rock n roll, while brother Tom s itinerant-preacher shtick (complete with stigmata) packs em in across the Bible Belt. Then there are the Plain/Corbeaus, leftover hippies from the 60s whose fashion-photographer son and model-turned-potter daughter amuse themselves by sleeping together. Amnon Plain s latest shoot features Alie e in a provocative pose that raises eyebrows, as well as other body parts, across the nation, especially since it hits the tabloids the day after her body is found, along with that of hotel manager Sandy Lansing, in the tres chic home of socialite Sallance Hanson. Now Davenport has to contend with a media storm as well as a murder. Not to mention his other big problem, the blizzard of women swirling around him: Catrin, his college sweetheart who s ditched her middle-aged marriage and is looking for solace; Marcy Sherrill, a lover from the force now injured in the line of duty; and the redoubtable Weather Karkinnen, his former fianc e, whose good graces he d like to get back into as soon as he s had the chance to sleep with ex- model Jael Corbeau a few dozen more times. Beneath the slime, there s a decent whodunit, but it takes real digging to unearth it. I don t know, muses Davenport during the Grand Guignol of a climax, we might be missing the Russians or the Chinese, but that s about it. Amen. Copyright 2000 Kirkus Reviews
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2000 April #1
    This 11th novel in the Lucas Davenport series is one of the best, presenting a seemingly simplistic plot that explodes into a complex cat-and-mouse game with an invisible killer. Two murder victims are discovered after a party attended by a group of people with too much money (and they are all spending it on drugs). Famous model Alie'e Maison is one of the victims; the other is the drug supplier. To complicate matters, an undercover cop who works on Davenport's team is identified as having been at the party. Davenport, deputy chief of police in Minneapolis, heads the investigation. As the killings continue, he must determine the motive behind the first murders and then find out why someone is killing almost everyone involved with Alie'e. The book takes off like a roller coaster ride, and the tension never stops. Sandford not only creates a suspenseful tale revolving around the art world, the high-fashion scene, and the realm of a large metropolitan police department attempting to protect its citizens, but he has spun a truly engrossing mystery that leaves the reader guessing to the end. For all fiction collections. Jo Ann Vicarel, Cleveland Heights-University Heights P.L., OH Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 1991 March #1
    Sandford ( Shadow Prey ) brings back Minneapolis police Lt. Lucas Davenport in this terrific, fast-moving psycho-thriller/procedural featuring one of the nastiest villains in recent fiction. Michael Bekker, a pathologist fixed on his own beauty, various high-powered drugs and hatred of his wife, also is obsessed with the eyes of the dead and dying. He joins forces with Carlo Druze, an actor with a face ruined by fire, to kill Bekker's wife and the theater manager who wants to cashier Druze. Druze kills and mutilates Mrs. Bekker when Bekker's out of town; Bekker returns the favor when Druze has a solid alibi, leading the Minneapolis police to suspect a serial killer. Fighting depression, estranged from his lover and their child, Davenport seeks a frightened mystery witness, Mrs. Bekker's lover, who tries to help while remaining hidden. To cover their tracks Bekker and Cruze go on a murderous, almost random rampage providing many gory scenes, but mercifully none too explicit. Nobody's safe from Bekker's drug-powered cunning, not sick children nor a helpless invalid. The final revelation of the unknown lover is wrenching. Pulitzer-winning journalist ``Sandford'' also writes as John Camp ( The Empress File ). BOMC and Mysterious Book Club alternates. (Apr.) Copyright 1991 Cahners Business Information.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2000 March #3
    The 12th entry in Sandford's ever-entertaining Prey series (Certain Prey, etc.) finds Minneapolis Deputy Police Chief Lucas Davenport again rambling through a murky case with his unique combination of gutsy intelligence and aw-shucks attitude. Fashion model Alie'e Maison has been found dead in a back bedroom, seemingly strangled at a chic party. Then typical of Davenport's luck the body of a second woman tumbles out of a closet just as the investigating cops get ready to leave the scene. There's no shortage of suspects who could have killed Alie'e: her boyfriend, for instance, recently dropped in favor of a lesbian lover, or her brother, a backwoods holy man who disapproved of his sister's lifestyle. There are Alie'e's parents, who could be trying to cover up a history of sexual abuse; the local drug dealer who supplied Alie'e with heroin; and the oily banker who appears to be the money behind the drug dealer. As many of these suspects get murdered, one by one, including those connected to the second victim in the closet, it's clear that the killer remains at large. That makes Davenport and his colleagues look foolish in the eyes of the media horde descending on the case. To make matters worse, Davenport's having women trouble again, torn among three beauties who want to bed him. As always, it's a joy to follow this rare cop who gets led more often by his gut instinct than by clues. His humor, understated and perverse, can be wildly funny, and the people he runs across are shrewdly conceived originals, cut from fabric way at the back of the bin. BOMC main selection; simultaneous Putnam Berkley Audio; author tour. (May) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.
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