Home :: Books :: Literature & Fiction  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction

Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Still Life With Crows

Still Life With Crows

List Price: $25.95
Your Price: $17.13
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 .. 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 >>

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Fast paced thriller
Review: If you have read "The Cabinet of Curiosities" then you will already be familiar with Special Agent Pendergast. He's an odd fellow who claims to work for the FBI. He arrives by Greyhound bus one day in Medicine Creek just as the town's sheriff is giving a press conference due to the recent murder.
Pendergast tells the sheriff that he has seen this type of thing before and convinces him to allow him to assist with the case. As more murders take place, the sheriff now wants to go it alone and have Pendergast removed from the scene. Both men have their own ideas as to how and why these murders are taking place. But will they be too late to save one of their own?
This is only my second Child & Preston book, I'm hooked. I did not want to put this book down.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Ahhhh....how can you not love Agent Pendergast?
Review: This time around, we find Special Agent Pendergast in Medicine Creek, Kansas. A dusty, dry, dying town in the middle of nowhere. Pendergast chooses to visit this locale on his vacation. Why? To solve the grisly, ritualistic murders taking place in this small community where everyone knows everyone, and everyone is suspect.

With his Goth Girl Friday, Corrie (a reluctant resident of Medicine Creek) Pendergast unravels the knot of clues left by our unknown killer.

Preston/Child weave a fantastic, gory tale of suspense that will keep you turning pages well into the wee hours of the morning. I can't wait to read more adventures of Agent Pendergast, if only to unravel the mysteries of the man himself. We know almost nothing of this suave Southern FBI agent, and that in itself is worth the read. He is full of surprises, with his archaic speech and gentlemanly manners. If you liked this book, I highly suggest reading "Relic", "Reliquary" and "Cabinet of Curiosities".

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Special Agent Pendergast takes a vacation to Kansas...
Review: But this is no ordinary vacation. He's here unofficially (of course), recovering from his previous adventure in New York. But what has drawn Pendergast to Medicine Creek?

A body found in the forest. Mutilated, surrounded by Indian artifacts and dead crows. The local sheriff, Dent Hazen, believes it to be a one-time incident, maybe a drifter. But Pendergast believes it to be the work of a serial killer, one that lives within the town...

The Agent enlists the help of eighteen-year-old misfit Corrie Swanson. As Pendergast's driver and assistant, Corrie is shown things that she had never believed possible...things that just might put her next on the killer's list.

Medicine Creek is about to get famous. A university has decidecd to put an experimental cornfield somewhere in the county, and most people in Creek hope it goes there. With pressure from the town's few wealthy citizens, Sheriff Hazen is forced to make changes in his investigation, like getting rid of Pendergast, and honing in on a "suspect"...changes that may cost him, and the rest of the townspeople, their lives.

Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child score again. In a novel better than any since RELIC, Preston/Child bring Special Agent Pendergast--with only a hint at his first name--to the forefront once more in this harrowing mystery-thriller.

Don't be put off by claims that the identity of the villain is a letdown. True, it is kind of surprising--and not as climatic as these guys' other novels--but it makes sense when you think about it, and you'll never suspect a thing until the very end.

STILL LIFE WITH CROWS is a must-read for mystery/suspense fans. Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child have a knack of bringing you into the novel with the first word, and never--not once in the four-hundred-odd pages--let you go.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Chilling suspense seasoned with dry wit!
Review: After a wobbly venture with "Cabinet of Curiosities," Douglas Preston and Lincoln Childs have returned to the high standards set with such early works as "Relic," "Mount Dragon," and "Riptide."

Special Agent Pendergast, the idiosyncratic, obsessively high-minded, and erudite loose cannon of the FBI--and ultimate outsider--directs the search for a serial killer from his rented rooms in a shabby Victorian farmhouse on the edge of the town of Medicine Creek, Nebraska. His unlikely assistant in this endeavor is a pierced and purple-haired teenaged misfit named Corrie. Her encyclopedic knowledge of town gossip and his encyclopedic knowledge of everything else help them find the patterns in a bizarre assortment of clues and solve the mystery. While the identity of the murderer is not entirely astonishing, P&C provide a fascinating coda to the story that shines a horrifying if bright light on the forensic details of the crimes.

Ancient conflicts with Native Americans, the social stranglehold of small-town American life, the two-edged sword of technological progress, and ruminations on the nature of values and profits make this book more than simple entertainmen (although it certainly is that).

As is usual with books from this dynamic duo, there is a cast of complex supporting characters, most of whom have the mix of quirks that make them--well, believable. In addition to the residents of Medicine Creek both past and present, a couple of individuals first encountered in earlier books play cameo roles. (P&C fans will be tickled by other passing references to past books.)

For this reader, the particular pleasure of the P&C production is intricate pattern of science, history, arts and humanties, and futuristic technology woven into the stories. And a hero like Pendergast--and many of the ancillary characters as well--repeatedly prove that there is no fact or discipline, no fragment of knowledge or philosophical outlook that can be disregarded as trivial.

If I have a particular criticism with their style, it is with the sometimes florid prose and weighty and mixed metaphors that snarl the pace of the narrative, expecially in the opening pages. The first chapter is sluggish although the story accelerates soon enough to a breathless pace.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great Summer Reading
Review: Like the other Child/Preston collaborations, this story is great as long as you can suspend your disbelief!The entire book is far-fetched, but it is guaranteed to keep you reading to the end. The description of the hot midwest summer and the cornfields is fantastic, as is the atmosphere of fear and doom. Great summer beach reading.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Excellently Executed
Review: Pendergast is a strange, cool guy and a brilliant sleuth. Out of his usual urban element in this one, the story shows a little more about our mysterious Special Agent A.X.L. Pendergast, FBI.

Interesting murders and interesting characters litter the literary landscape. Preston and Child are great at making the ordinary into the forboding, the mundane into the maddening. Big score on the story's atmosphere, and excellent storytelling, as usual.

The only thing I'd say caught me off-guard is I caught myself noticing Preston and Child's story pattern. That was momentarily distracting, and I hope they come up with a few new plot tricks for the next adventure.

There is, I think, a hint of what's coming in the next novel or two.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Entertaining but Predictable
Review: I liked this book - it was a quick, intriguing read that draws you in. My only objection was that it was too predictable. It seemed as though the authors went out of their way to make obvious aspects of this book different than some of their other ones - a teenaged girl rather than an academic, a small town in Kansas rather than New York City, etc. Unfortunately, the plot itself, particularly the ending, was pretty much the same old thing. These guys love the "scary" chase scenes.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: There're Back
Review: I really enjoy books by Child and Preston; however, the last 2-3 have been rather ordinary. Still Life With Crows is a comeback book. If you love the mix of historical fact mixed with fiction, this is interesting read (less historical than most of their books).

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: good, but not the best
Review: This particular book is good, but not the best by this talented duo, IMHO (I like the C of C the best). There is an absence of the high-tech aspect that is present in their other works, which I missed. However, Special Agent Pendergast is brought to light and I must admit that this character is entrancing. We even learn the first two letters of his first name!
Readers who enjoy who-done-its, suspense and brutal murders will like this book. You won't know who the perp is until the very end, trust me. This is because the authors are masters at misleading the reader into making wrong guesses.
I give this book 4 of 5 stars because I think the ending is a bit too odd to be convincing.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Still Born With Crows
Review: They had me. They really had me. Killer on the loose. Pendergast on the investigation. Killings with strange, inexplicable clues. Then...we reach the end of the book and...BAM...Preston/Child have now officially succumbed to Crichton Syndrome (meaning it's impossible to end a book on a high note) Without revealing the ending for those of you who will want to read it, let me just say that it's the most ridiculous, ludicrous ending that I've read in a long while. I expect so much more from these guys and they have let me down in their last 2 books. C'mon guys. I dare you to top "Relic." I dare you to surpass "Riptide." I dare you.
Please.


<< 1 .. 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates