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Verses for the Dead
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Verses for the Dead
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Verses for the Dead
Ebook368 pages6 hours

Verses for the Dead

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

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Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this ebook

After an overhaul of leadership at the FBI's New York field office, Special Agent A.X.L. Pendergast is forced to accept an unthinkable condition of continued employment: the unorthodox lone wolf must now work with a partner.

Pendergast and his new cohort, Special Agent Coldmoon, are dispatched to Florida to investigate a rash of ritualistic murders. A killer is carving out the hearts of his victims, and depositing the stolen organs alongside the headstones of existing graves. Accompanying each heart is a cryptic letter, signed by a 'Mr Brokenhearts'. There is one more intriguing aspect to Mr Brokenhearts' macabre modus operandi: the chosen graves all belong to women who have committed suicide.

As he searches for the connection between the old suicides and the new murders, Pendergast realizes the brutal new crimes may be just the tip of the iceberg: that he faces a conspiracy of death reaching back decades.

'Fast-moving, sophisticated and bursting with surprises... There's nothing else like them' WASHINGTON POST.

'One of thrillerdom's most exciting and intriguing series leads, and it remains among the most reliable in the genre' BOOKLIST.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHead of Zeus
Release dateDec 31, 2018
ISBN9781788546751
Unavailable
Verses for the Dead
Author

Douglas Preston

Douglas Preston, a regular contributor to the New Yorker, has worked for the American Museum of Natural History and taught English at Princeton University. With his frequent collaborator, Lincoln Child, he has written many bestselling thrillers including Relic, which became a major motion picture, The Book of the Dead and Cemetery Dance. He is also the author of the bestselling The Codex, Tyrannosaur Canyon and Blasphemy.

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Reviews for Verses for the Dead

Rating: 3.958823491764706 out of 5 stars
4/5

170 ratings13 reviews

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I am a fan. I have a number of the Preston & Child books. They make you think. Sometimes they help your imagination turn something ordinary into something sinister. So when I see a new one on the shelves of a book store, well, it's really hard - scratch that, impossible to not pick it up.Verses for the Dead is another Agent Pendergast story. This one picks up with Pendergast having a new supervisor who just doesn't see things the same way. So he is paired with another FBI agent and they are tasked with solving another case.Verses for the Dead has a lot of twists and turns and takes you to multiple locales across the USA. Recently I was in Miami Beach, and the bulk of the story is set in this city. So it was interesting to conjure images in my mind of where the characters could have been.Many of the other Agent Pendergast series take you on a journey, leading you down a path towards what you think will be some sort of supernatural, mind-bending solution.Not here. This is a fantastically well-written piece of work that suggests alternatives, guesswork, logic, and yep, a couple of excellent twists that get you.While there are connections to the other Agent Pendergast books, Verses for the Dead easily stands alone, and is enjoyable even if it is the first you've read. But be warned: after reading this, you'll want to go and find the other ones and dig deep.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Back to the FBI cases where Special Agent Pendergast tackle a serial killer in Miami with a new partner. The was a great addition to a great series. Some mild profanity which is unusual for these authors.An excellent read , looking forward to more from these authors.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I found the most interesting part of the book was the interplay between agent Pendergast and recently assigned junior agent Coldmoon. They have been assigned to investigate a rash of killings. The story within this story is that their FBI boss, Walter Pickett, is looking to move agent Pendergast out of his hair as he does not approve of Pendergast's investigative techniques. Coldmoon is assigned to help Pendergast but really he is Pickett’s spy and snitch. Turns out that Pendergast and Coldmoon turn out to be good partners and eventually solve the case – – but not without Pendergast saving Coldmoon's life. Coldmoon in turn is responsible for saving Pendergast's career.

    The murder investigation moves slowly at times for me and occasionally I "fast forwarded" to more interesting action sequences.

    I think this is the third book I have read in the Pendergast series. Turns out I am really much more interested in the Pendergast character than I am in the stories that he is involved with.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Those that have followed the Pendergast series know that he is an extraordinary individual with almost supernatural talents for seeing what is hidden in a case. A man who likes to work alone he is forced to accept a partner to aid in his investigation into suicides that may actually be murders in Florida. I really thought that agent Coldmoon...a Locoda Indian...might be the perfect accompaniment to Pendergast. Although an exact opposite...together they are a team to be reckoned with. As the other 17 books were, this one is an equally exciting adventure with the master of investigation.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Another excellent addition to the author’s Pendergast series. This one is full of action and fast moving. One of the best things is the introduction of a new character agent Armstrong, Coldmoon. As his “temporary partner” Coldmoon adds a new and quite different perspective and approach - a refreshing change.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    One of my favorite current series and, yes, I've read all eighteen entries. Naturally I think some are better than others, but this one hits all the right notes. Very enjoyable read. FBI Special Agent Pendergast, a new partner, a new reporter, a new location and an interesting medical examiner. Clues are scattered throughout, but only Agent Pendergast is able to decipher. Even he has not anticipated the final reveal that set the stage for the serial killings.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Verses for the Dead, Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child’s eighteenth novel featuring FBI Special Agent Aloysius Pendergast, begins with Assistant Director in Charge Walter Pickett taking over the FBI’s New York Field Office after Longstreet’s death in the previous novel. Pickett, a by-the-book type, dislikes Pendergast’s unorthodox methods and the tendency for his perps to end up deceased, so he sends Pendergast to investigate a possible prospective serial killer in Miami while assigning him a partner, Special Agent Coldmoon, ostensibly to follow standard FBI procedure, but also to report back on Pendergast.They travel to Miami, where a killer calling himself Mister Brokenhearts is taking his victims’ hearts and placing them on the graves of suicides. Pendergast believes the key to these crimes is to investigate the link between the suicides, as well as weather or not they actually killed themselves, but he finds resistance from Pickett who believes Pendergast is ignoring the current crimes to look into ephemera. Coldmoon has to negotiate his belief that an agent should be loyal to their partner with Pickett’s expectation that he will curtail Pendergast’s eccentricities and help Pickett to remove Pendergast from the New York Field Office.While Preston and Child’s inclusion of Coldmoon is an important step toward diversifying this series, the character falls into tokenism at times as his Lakota heritage becomes his sole defining trait. In offering insight into Coldmoon, Preston and Child have this professional law enforcement officer compare CSU investigators in their protective gear to ancestral spirits (110) and later connect the sight of a shooting star to Wakan Tanka spirits (125). In a series like Tony Hillerman’s Leaphorn and Chee novels, such details would help with world-building, but here they seem designed to continually remind the reader of Coldmoon’s Native American heritage while detracting from the opportunity to show him as a more well-rounded character. Occasionally, they engage with his conflict of interest between Pickett and Pendergast, but almost every scene from his perspective includes a moment of tokenism.Overall, the novel itself is one of the best Pendergast standalone stories. Perhaps in a continuation of research from their 2013 novel White Fire, Preston and Child include a scene where Pendergast demonstrates his investigative ability and wins over a recalcitrant local officer by doing his best Sherlock Holmes impression, only to conclude, “Poor Conan Doyle got it all wrong: Sherlock Holmes used the process of induction – not deduction” (pg. 29). The narrative is tighter than in the previous novel, City of Endless Night, and the secondary characters compelling enough that one hopes they make appearances in future novels.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I love Pendergast mysteries so loved this one too although I’ll have to say it wasn’t one of their best.For my liking, the end kind of fell flat. I’m still a big fan of these mysteries though.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Special Agent Pendergast his usual special self. One of my favorite characters.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Considering how much I disliked Pendergast book #17 ("City of Endless Night"), I went into this #18 with much trepidation, worried that Preston & Child had finally reached the end of their ability to write good Pendergast books anymore. Lo and behold, I actually enjoyed this book (although I had trouble getting into it at first). However, it feels completely different from all other Pendergast books. For aficionados of this series, don't expect #18 to be a full-on Pendergast novel. It's as if Pendergast is still slowly regaining his personality (which was completely and annoyingly AWOL in book #17).In "Verses for the Dead," Pendergast, always one to operate alone, finds himself saddled with a partner as a condition of continued employment. Pendergast and his new partner Agent Coldmoon are assigned to investigate a series of murders in Miami. The killer cuts out the hearts of his victims and leaves them, along with handwritten notes, on local gravestones.The case itself, while a little slow getting going, is interesting and gets more intriguing as the book progresses. I enjoyed the plot. The odd thing about this book is that it could have been written with any other protagonist in Pendergast's place, and it would have read the same. In other words, the distinctiveness of Pendergast's personality and singular behavior was absent. It's as if this book were written in its entirety with another protagonist, and then as an afterthought Preston & Child decided to make the protagonist Pendergast so that it could be considered part of the Pendergast series. In reality, it should have had a different protagonist and been billed as a standalone novel. None of the characters from previous Pendergast novels was present -- Lieutenant D'Agosta was hardly even mentioned; Proctor and Constance appear only in the very beginning, as if thrown in only to connect this book to previous Pendergast books, and never reappear.When I finished the book, I got the feeling that it might have been written by someone else -- a ghostwriter, maybe? -- because it did not have the feel of the earlier Pendergast books. The few times that Pendergast's quirkiness strains to make an appearance in #18, it felt like a different author trying to imitate how Preston & Child might write Pendergast. Similarly, I kept waiting for Pendergast and Coldmoon to clash as a result of Pendergast's unconventional investigative ways. It never happened. Such an odd feeling to the book.I still gave this book 4 stars because I did enjoy it at face value. It just wasn't a Pendergast book in the truest sense.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Another great Pendergast novel.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Verses for the Dead is another Agent Pendergast novel that takes place in Florida. The settings, characters and storyline are all believable. There is suspense, a good storyline and a surprise ending. The book received five stars in this review because it was well written and kept the reader engaged to the end. It is highly recommended.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Fast, Fun Read. Love Pendergast!!! These guys write some great crime stories!!!