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The Face of Death | ![]() |
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The Face of Death | ![]() |
专业书评 From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. McFadyen's outstanding sequel to his debut, Shadow Man (2006), provides a chilling reminder: "However bad things may become, evil men only triumph in the most important ways when we let them." FBI Special Agent Smoky Barrett is barely back in fighting form six months after killing the man who murdered her family and best friend before she must deal with another threat. "The Stranger," a serial killer seeking revenge for a miscarriage of justice, has targeted 16-year-old Sarah Langstrom, who asks for Smoky's help after the Stranger kills Sarah's latest foster family. The Stranger's murder spree actually began on Sarah's sixth birthday with her biological parents and dog. Smoky's crackerjack L.A. Violent Crimes Unit whirls into action to catch a monster who inflicts pain on Sarah by systematically killing anyone she loves. Smoky's fierce first-person narrative and Sarah's eerie diary excerpts, supplemented by a great cast, lift this scary thriller far above the usual serial-killer norm. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From AudioFile
This follow-up to the bestselling SHADOW MAN brings gifted FBI Special Agent Smoky Barrett into another dark and twisted region where monsters feed. Narrator Joyce Bean injects a heartbreaking ache into her voice as she portrays the teenaged victim of a murderer known as The Stranger. The author ingeniously puts her characters into impossible situations and forces them into making extraordinary decisions involving murder and sacrifice. Bean uses her vocal prowess to wring emotion and pathos from every twist and turn. If youre up for a walk on the dark side, dont miss this. R.O. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.
From Booklist
McFadyen builds on the strengths of his debut novel, Shadow Man (2006), which introduced the scarred FBI agent Smoky Barrett, who is still recovering from the slaughter of her husband and daughter at the hands of a serial killer. Now she's reached a turning point: she is ready to put away her family's clothes and possessions, to come to terms with the fact that they're gone. But her recovery is interrupted by a new case: a teenage girl who claims that her adopted family was murdered by a man who calls himself "The Stranger." Smoky, who herself has a young adopted daughter (the only survivor from a more recent case), pushes herself to her emotional and physical limits to catch the killer and to protect her new family. McFadyen writes like a veteran, and Smoky proves that she's a strong enough protagonist to support a series. David Pitt
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
" McFadyen writes like a veteran, and Smoky proves that she’s a strong enough protagonist to support a series."—Booklist