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Scaredy Cat : A Novel

Scaredy Cat : A Novel

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: I trusted you. You, the reviewers with comments...
Review: And was let down. I'm new to reading (I was more like "I'll just wait for the movie" type) and love a great thriller, but this wasn't one of them. I respect the Brittish, but I still don't understand lots of their terms and meanings, so I got lost in that a lot. I like the characters in it, Thorne, McElroy, and Holland, the story just didn't move me like I want thrillers to do. I'm now reading another highly reviewed book, "The Vanished Man" by Jeffery Deamer. It's scaring the bejesus out of me so far, so maybe you the reviewers aren't that bad, and I'll just blame this one on me being the "New reader guy, who doesn't get it". =)

P.S. I do agree with one of the reviews about the epologue...it really was sad, but good.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: IS SMARTY PANTS NEXT?
Review: Billingham's titles are great; not surprising since he is also a well-respected standup comic. However, even though his books have touches of humor, they are dark, disturbing, but definitely worth reading.
This time, our reluctant hero, Tom Thorne, is after a serial killer, who has killed a young woman in front of her little boy. Alas and alack, it appears there are TWO serial killers working together.
As we come to know the two villains in flashbacks, Billingham weaves a tightly constructed tale of a warped love, and it's disastrous results.
There are some strong supporting characters in Billingham's novels, and they help move the twisting plot along to a heart-stopping climax in a schoolyard. The identity of the real sicko is surprising, and don't be surprised at how Billingham treats his heroes, either!
An outstanding book, can't wait for the next one!

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A darkly, intense British thriller
Review: DI Tom Thorne is back after a promising debut in SLEEPYHEAD. Tom and his team of DS Sarah McEvoy and DC Dave Holland investigate a pair of serial killers who kill in tandem. One killer is more brutal than the other is. The first deaths involve a three-year-old child who was locked in the house with the body of his dead mother for three days, and a woman left behind a rubbish bin at the rail station.

Tom is a gloomy chap in the best of times. Now he is tormented by the thought of the child left with his dead mother. He makes it his personal mission to catch the killer. The characters are well-fleshed out with all the fragility and emotion that comes with being human. The subplots relating to the team and their interaction were very interesting. The reader really gains an emotional connection to these characters.

The story is told by the use of flashbacks so we get to know who the killers were. The present is a little harder to discern. One of the killers has changed his name and is living a "normal" life. The plotting is dark and emotional. You can try to figure things out as you read along, but things are not always what they seem. There are some good twists and turns. The ending was quite poignant and stayed with me several hours after finishing the book. The book was not perfect. There were some subplots that just seems extraneous and made the book drag in spots. Overall, it was a very good book and I look forward to the next entry in this series.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Slow moving character rich suspense novel
Review: DI Tom Thorne is faced with solving a series of murders. It appears that women are being killed in pairs. Two separate killings are occuring at the same time in and around London. The killers apparently kill in tandem in that the means of death are similar. Thorne must catch them before they kill again. The key is to find out who they are and what drives them to kill.
SCAREDY CAT being a pure psychological suspense novel is one of the more disappointing reads of the year. It is packages as a highly suspenseful and fun serial killer novel. However, rather than plot or pacing, the emphasis is on characterization contained in a slow, meandering quite ordinary police procedural. To add to the sense of disappointment, when the true identity of the killer is announced, I scratched my head in bewilderment in that I didn't recall him previously. To his credit, Mark Billingham manages to create full, rich and memorable characters. I just wish they moved a bit quicker.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Test
Review: England's answer to Dennis Lehane. Grabs the reader right from the start and doesn't let up until the shocking end. 'Scaredy Cat' is a rollicking rollcoaster of a read. Enough hairpin twists and turns, intrigue and suspense for a half a dozen novels!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not as good as his first...
Review: Getting out of the tech genre for awhile, I relaxed with Mark Billingham's Scaredy Cat. This is his follow-up to Sleepyhead (that I really liked)...

A number of killings in England has Tom Thorne looking for a serial killer. The victims are found in pairs, and although the methods are similar, the intensity of the violence is different. He figures there are actually a pair of killers working in tandem. The pair of killers go back to a grammar school friendship, and it's the typical controller/controllee type relationship. The cops quickly get one of the killers, but then try to set a trap for the other one. Unfortunately, the trap backfires and the killer starts to strike closer to home. The question becomes can he be stopped before he kills someone close to Thorne.

As I mentioned above, I really liked Sleepyhead. Very dark, and hard to tell who was guilty and who was innocent. Scaredy Cat was just as dark, but the suspense wasn't there. You find out right away who the killers are, but you're not quite sure about the current identity of the controlling personality. The relationship between the killers is rather complex and somewhat ill-explained, and one of the common elements that tie them together is left to hang out there for far too long. When it's finally revealed, it doesn't seem to have the impact that it was probably intended to. Thorne's personal torments don't seem to do anything but sit there. The relationship between his partner Holland and a female cop with issues also doesn't seem to add anything to the storyline.

Maybe it's just the sophomore jinx, but this novel definitely isn't on par with his first...

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Was this even a crime novel?
Review: I read a lot of crime novels, and this one sits down at the bottom of the bunch. The idea of two serial killers working in tandem has already been done before (as early as James Patterson's Kiss The Girls), and this one brings nothing new to the concept. Instead, we're treated to lengthy descriptions of the main characters' personal lives. Tom Thorne seems to be conflicted by something new in every novel, but this novel was so tiresome I forgot what he was upset about a day after reading it. There's Thorne's young partner who is in a troubled relationship. There's a new female officer who is eager to prove herself - and also has a drug addiction.

When the book remembers it's actually a crime novel, it isn't too bad. There are decent moments of suspense, and one or two twists, but I saw the ending coming from a mile away. All in all, Scaredy Cat feels like an extended episode of NYPD Blue or The Bill (a British police series). It's unoriginal, exceedlingly soapy and often predictable. You're better off picking up Lazybones or Sleepyhead, which are decent crime novels by the same author.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Not bad, not bad at all
Review: This book was not that bad, actually it's was amazingly intense until the end, I must admit I was a bit disappointed " just at the end". There were quite a few things that were unanswered, and the direction was very misleading. Not in a twist kind of a way,like (I had you going) yet (here is a lot of information), that, 1). Doesn't have closure at the end; 2). has nothing to do with the main villain. But hey, solving crime shouldn't be as simple as we would like to,... READ?
Yatta yatta, so what! I enjoyed reading it, it was witty and exciting.
Also I really liked Sleepyhead, Mr. Billingham has quite a future with his talented writing style. PS, I really enjoy the intellect and wit about M.B's writing. AND the different terminology by the brit's language is just GREAT fun and catchy. For weeks after I finished this book, I was calling people bloody this and sloth's that!
Recommend, for sure !!!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: an intense mystery
Review: This is my first book by author Billingham and I am quite impressed. The plot twists around a pair of serial killers, intertwining the lives of DI Thorne and his crew of investigators. The final unveiling of the killer was quite a surprise, as I had guessed a different character to be the villain. The second half of the book really picks up speed and is hard to put down. You don't want to stop until the killer's identity is uncovered and hopefully he is caught. Intriguing characters, fast moving plot; I highly recommend it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Darkly fascinating
Review: When two young women are found strangled in London, the police suspect a link. But they seem different in some ways. Eventually Detective Inspector Tom Thorne suspects two killers, linked somehow but operating alone. One of those killers proves to be easy enough to catch, but the other, his current identity a secret, is more challenging indeed. That killer strikes for pleasure, and gains further pleasure from the pain he causes others--including his fellow killer.

Thorne and his unit are obsessed with the killer, but have to manage their other responsibilities as well. England may not be the murder kingdom that the U.S. is, but murder, like fast food, has been imported and taken. Meanwhile, the police have to deal with their own issues--sexual tensions among the detectives, alcoholism, and drug abuse. Thorne doesn't have a home life, but he does have an aging father who has begun behaving more and more erratically.

Author Mark Billingham delivers a darkly fascinating and exciting suspense novel. Thorne and the killer play a battle of wits that each intends to win. Thorne hates the price he has to pay to capture the killer and the killer savors his kills, but they are alike in their willingness to make any sacrifice to achieve their goals. Fans of Bill James will love SCAREDY CAT and anticipate more books by Billingham.


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