Showing posts with label Murder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Murder. Show all posts

The Vision Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Mystery, Murder, Psychic, Serial Killer, Suspense, Thriller

The Vision

Published: 1977
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Mystery, Murder, Psychic, Serial Killer, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Mary Bergen develops clairvoyant skills after being raped and maimed as a kid by her family's gardener, Berton Mitchell

She assists the police in their murder investigations with the support of her older brother Alan and spouse. Unfortunately, she can only detect fragments of a crime as they occur in real-time.

Mary prevents a serial murderer from taking another victim a few days before Christmas. Following the trauma, Alan, who has always been envious of Max for entering his sister's life and taking over his job as her caretaker, attempts to persuade her to divorce him once more. She flatly refuses. He agrees with her decision and departs for a holiday.

Mary and Max return to their mansion for the holidays. She does, however, have a vivid vision of four women being murdered in the future. This has never happened before, as she could only experience visions in real-time before. Max attempts to convince her that it was all a dream, but she is skeptical. The following morning, a news program is shown revealing the murder of four ladies who shared a home by a single perpetrator. Mary believes she knows one of the victims.

Mary has her weekly appointment with her psychiatrist, who is attempting to help her overcome the horrible childhood incident by reliving it. She recalls pounding wings and a terrible voice talking to her. 

However, before she can recall Mitchell's face, many glass figurines in the office begin pelting the two. The ruckus dies down after a few minutes. 

That night, Mary sees the same assailant murdering three people at a hair shop. Max's pistol animates and begins shooting at them as she tries to visualize the killer's face. The pair becomes persuaded that they are being tormented by a poltergeist who is attempting to obstruct Mary's visions. 

The next morning, another news broadcast confirms the triple homicide occurred. In a panic, she phones Alan, who calms her down.

Soon after, Mary has another vision in which the killer climbs a tower in King's Point and snipes locals during a Christmas Eve boat procession. 

Percy Osterman, her, and Max head there to halt the attack with the approval of a police chief she knows. Mary's old friend and journalist Lou Pasternak lives in King's Point, where they stay. 

The three attempt to identify the assailant. Berton Mitchell is mentioned, although Mary is aware that he committed suicide in his jail cell long before the trial, always professing innocence. They request that Osterman look into Mitchell's wife and son, whom they believe are still alive.

The next day, Mary attempts to recall the killer's face. However, a swarm of seagulls assault her and Max and refuse to go until she gives up. They then go to the King's Point police station, where they manage to persuade the town's dubious sheriff, John Patmore, to put cops in every tower. 

However, no attack occurs that night, much to Patmore's chagrin. Following that, Mary has another vision of a lady she believes she recognizes being murdered by the killer while eating dinner at Lou's.

The three receive two pieces of unpleasant news the next day. The familiar lady Mary saw in her vision is discovered dead, and Osterman phones to inform her that Mitchell's wife and son perished decades ago in an arson assault on their trailer. 

She convinces Lou and Max to drive her to a closed entertainment center with a tower that night, convinced that the sniper shootings will take place. Mary and Max break inside the center, while Lou stands guard in the automobile.

Mary is plagued by visions of fluttering wings and flashbacks of her childhood abuse. Max is at the bottom of the steps, while she is at the top of the tower.

The murderer arrives and stabs Lou to death before entering and attacking and injuring Max. He manages to remain still while the killer, later revealed to be Alan, climbs the stairs and confronts his sister.

Mary recalls her assault and understands it was Alan, not Berton Mitchell, who assaulted her. He tied her to the floor of Mitchell's cottage before biting, slashing, and stuffing a live bat up her vagina, which is where her memory of flapping wings came from. 

Her brother managed to implant false memories and a psychic grip on the occurrence while she was in a coma at the hospital by warning her of all the dreadful things he would do to her if she ever talked of what truly happened. 

All of the "poltergeist" episodes were caused by Mary's own powers acting against her as a result of the hold. 

Alan also admits to murdering Mitchell's wife and children, and that all of the victims Mary recognized were prior girlfriends of his.

Max tries to escape the center while bleeding heavily, attracting the notice of incoming officers and Patmore, who misidentifies him as the killer and shoots him in the shoulder. 

Mary, now that she knows the truth, utilizes her psychic abilities to cause the bats that reside in the tower to attack Alan. He trips and falls down the steps, breaking his neck. 

A few weeks later, she attends Lou's burial and pays a visit to Max, who is recovering in the hospital. She cheerfully admits that she is no longer terrified of the dark.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Bad Guy, Edge Of Your Seat, Even Though, Good Read, Koontz At His Best, Koontz Books, Koontz Earlier, Love Dean, Mary Bergen, Serial Killer, Twists And Turns


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The Face of Fear Summary

Dean Koontz, Brian Coffey, American, Contemporary, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Murder, Psychic, Serial Killer, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

The Face of Fear

Published: 1977
Author: Dean Koontz (Written as Brian Coffey)
Genre: American, Contemporary, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Murder, Psychic, Serial Killer, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Graham Harris was once one of the world's best mountain climbers until a mishap five years ago left him with a paralyzed leg, a phobia of heights...and a terrifying psychic gift that allows him to see crimes as they occur. 

Harris lives in New York City, where the Butcher, a violent maniac, has been mutilating young women. 

Graham senses the Butcher claiming another victim while delivering an interview on live television one night. When the psychopath learns Graham is a threat to him, he devises a scheme to murder the clairvoyant. 

Graham detects the Butcher riding an elevator to his floor while working late one night in his office building. Graham begins a long night of hide and seek to try to avoid the psychopath's grip, during which Connie and Graham gradually run out of places to hide and are eventually faced with a terrifying ultimatum: either stay and take their chances with the Butcher or scale the face of the building in the midst of a blizzard. 

Graham is finally coaxed into confronting his anxiety with the latter, all the while the Butcher shoots at them. 

The Butcher is eventually slain violently in an incident involving a piece of machinery. Graham and Connie flee, but they are soon joined by Anthony Prine, the second half of the Butcher

It is discovered that he and Bollinger had a connection similar to that of Leopold and Loeb. When Prine confronts them, he is shot by investigator Ira Preduski

Connie and Graham are engaged, as revealed in the epilogue.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Alan Jay Glueckman, Bob Balaban, CBS, Connie Weaver, Edge Of My Seat, High Rise, Lee Horsley, Main Characters, Mountain Climber, New York, Office Building, Pam Dawber, Serial Killer, The Butcher, Twists And Turns, William Sadler, Years Ago, York City


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Odd Interlude Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Fantasy, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Murder, Psychic, Romance, Suspense, Thriller

Odd Interlude

Published: 2012
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Fantasy, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Murder, Psychic, Romance, Suspense, Thriller
Book 4.1 of 7: Odd Thomas

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Harmony Corner, a beautiful roadside town nestled on a lonely stretch of the Pacific coast, has everything a tired traveler needs—a nice cafe, a convenient service station, a cluster of cottages... and the Harmony family farmhouse reigning over it all. 

When Odd Thomas and his companions settle for the night, they learn that there's more to this lonely refuge than meets the eye—and that there's something more terrifying than either life or death. A more detailed summary will be published as soon as I get the time.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Another Great, Forward To The Next, Fry Cook, Good Read, Harmony Corner, Looking Forward, Page Turner, Thomas Series


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You Are Destined to Be Together Forever Summary

Dean Koontz, Fantasy, Murder, Mystery, Paranormal, Romance, Science Fiction, Short Story, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

You Are Destined to Be Together Forever

Published: 9, December 2014
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: Fantasy, Murder, Mystery, Paranormal, Romance, Science Fiction, Short Story, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller
Book 6.1 of 7: Odd Thomas

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

This short novella returns to the central character's origins to examine the beginnings of his romance with Stormy Llewellyn

The spirit of Elvis returns here, as does another ghostly character who will lead the young couple into an adventure that will culminate in their obtaining the prophecy that they will spend forever with one another. Saint Odd, the series' final full-length novel, was scheduled to be released in January 2015.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Destined To Be Together, Final Book, Gypsy Mummy, Last Book, Looking Forward, Odd And Stormy, Quick Read, Short Story, Thomas Series, Together Forever


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Odd Thomas Summary

Dean Koontz, Action, Crime, Espionage, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Murder, Occult, Psychic, Suspense, Thriller

Odd Thomas

Published: 2003
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: Action, Crime, Espionage, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Murder, Occult, Psychic, Suspense, Thriller
Book 1 of 7: Odd Thomas

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Odd Thomas is contacted silently by the spirit of a young girl brutally raped and murdered at the start of the novel, and is psychically led to her killer, a former schoolmate called Harlo Landerson, by his unusual capacity to interpret the dead. 

Koontz reveals how Odd was named and continues to reveal, layer by layer, how Odd's chaotic background has influenced his life, and as those circumstances are revealed, Odd's otherworldly powers begin to make more sense.

Odd encounters a suspicious-looking man at the restaurant while working as a short-order chef in a California desert town, followed by Bodachs, shadowy spirit creatures who manifest only during times of death and calamity. 

This man, whom Odd dubs "Fungus Man" (because of his waxy complexion and blond hair that resembles mold), is being pursued by an abnormally huge swarm of Bodachs, and Odd is certain that he is related to some awful disaster that is about to unfold. 

Odd utilizes his uncanny sense, which his soul mate Bronwen (a.k.a. Stormy) Llewellyn refers to as "psychic magnetism," to track him down in order to learn more about him.

Odd's sixth sense takes him to Fungus Guy's home, where he learns more about the man and a mystery other-worldly connection to the deadly forces about to be unleashed on Pico Mundo. 

Odd becomes fully involved in an attempt to avert the tragic slaughter he knows will occur the next day, accompanied at times by the ghost of Elvis Presley and encountering other remarkable spirits, including a slain prostitute.


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Addison Timlin, Anton Yelchin, Dead People, Fry Cook, Fungus Man, Highly Recommend, Howard Kaplan, John Baldecchi, Looking Forward, Nico Tortorella, Patton Oswalt, Pico Mundo, Rlj Entertainment, Sees Dead, Sixth Sense, Stephen Sommers, Thomas Series, Well Written, Willem Dafoe, Young Man


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Cell Summary

Stephen King, Action, Adventure, Apocalyptic, Classic, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Murder, Psychic, Suspense, Technothriller, Thriller, Zombie

Cell

Published: 24, January 2006
Author: Stephen King
Genre: Action, Adventure, Apocalyptic, Classic, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Murder, Psychic, Suspense, Technothriller, Thriller, Zombie

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Clayton Riddell, a struggling Maine artist, has just landed a graphic novel deal in Boston when "The Pulse," a signal broadcast over the global cell phone network, transforms all cell phone users into mindless zombie-like killers. 

Clay is standing in Boston Common when the Pulse goes off, sparking havoc all around him. As the "phoners" attack each other and anybody in sight, civilization falls.

Clay is forced together with middle-aged Thomas McCourt and youngster Alice Maxwell during the mayhem; the three runs to Tom's suburban house while Boston burns. 

The next day, they discover that the "phoners" have begun scavenging for food and joining together. 

Clay remains adamant about returning to Maine and reuniting with his son, Johnny. Tom and Alice accompany him since they have no other options. 

They travel north by night over destroyed New England, encountering other survivors and gaining frightening information about the operations of the phoners, who continue to attack non-phoners on sight.

They arrive at the Gaiten Academy, a prep school with one remaining teacher, Charles Ardai, and one surviving student, Jordan, after crossing into New Hampshire. 

The couple shows the newcomers where the local phoners congregate at night: they crowd into the Academy's soccer field and "turn off" till dawn. 

The phoners have clearly formed a hive mind and are acquiring psychic skills. The five survivors resolve to kill the flock, which they achieve with the help of two propane tanks.

Clay attempts to persuade everyone to go, but the others hesitate to forsake the elderly Ardai

That night, all of the survivors have the same terrifying dream: they are in a stadium, surrounded by phoners when a disheveled man wearing a Harvard University hooded sweatshirt approaches and kills them. 

When the heroes awaken, they recount their terrifying dream experiences and refer to him as "the Raggedy Man." 

A new flock has encircled their home, and the "normies" are confronted by the flock's symbolic spokesman: the man in the Harvard sweatshirt. 

In retaliation, the flock murders other normals and tells the heroes to travel north to a location in Maine known as "Kashwak." 

The flock psychically drives Ardai to commit suicide in order to silence their biggest complaint. 

Clay and his friends bury him and head north, as Clay is still desperate to get home.

On the way, they discover that as "flock-killers," they have been psychically designated as untouchables, to be avoided by other normies. 

Alice is slain by a loutish couple of normies after a trifling argument on the road. The party buries her and travels to Clay's hometown of Kent Pond, where they find notes from Johnny revealing that Clay's estranged wife Sharon was transformed into a phoner, but their son lived for several days until being pushed by the phoners to travel to the ostensible cell phone-free Kashwak. 

Clay has another nightmare in which he discovers that the normie refugees were all exposed to the Pulse once they arrived. 

He is still determined to find his kid, but after encountering another group of flock-killers, Tom and Jordan decide to forego the phoners' planned ceremonial killings. 

Before splitting off, the party finds that Alice's killers were psychically driven to do a heinous suicide act in exchange for touching an untouchable.

Clay sets out on his own, but the others soon reappear, driving a small school bus; the phoners have used their ever-increasing psychic powers to force them to rejoin him. 

Ray Huizenga, a construction worker, is one of the flock-killers who secretly provides Clay a cell phone and a phone number, advising him to use them when the time is appropriate; Ray then kills himself. 

The group arrives at Kashwak, the site of a half-assembled county fair, where an increasing number of phoners are behaving erratically and breaking away from the flock. 

Jordan believes that the Pulse was produced by a computer program and that, while it is still transmitting into the battery-powered cell phone network, it has become contaminated by a computer worm, infecting newer phone users with a mutated Pulse. 

Nonetheless, an army of phoners is waiting for them, and Clay recognizes Sharon among them. 

The phoners confine the group to the fair's exhibition hall for the night; tomorrow is the ceremonial execution, which will be psychically broadcast to all phoners and remaining normies worldwide.

Clay notices Ray's unsaid plan as he awaits their morning execution: Ray had packed the back of the bus with explosives, connected a phone-triggered detonator to them, and then executed himself to prevent the phoners from telepathically detecting the explosives. 

Jordan drives the vehicle into the midst of the inert phoners after the group breaks a window for him to squeeze through. 

Clay is able to detonate the bomb and wipe out the Raggedy Man and his flock thanks to a jury-rigged cell phone patch set up by pre-Pulse fair workers.

The majority of the party travels to Canada, where the coming winter will annihilate the region's defenseless and leaderless phoners. 

Clay travels south in search of his son. He comes across Johnny, who has a "corrupted" Pulse; he has walked away from Kashwak and appears to know his father. 

However, Johnny is an unstable shell of his former self, so Clay decides to give Johnny another Pulse blast, hoping that the progressively garbled signal will balance itself out and reset his son's brain. 

Clay dials and places the mobile phone to Johnny's ear towards the end of the book.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Brian Witten, Cell Phone, Character Development, Clayton Riddell, Dark Tower, George Romero, Isabelle Fuhrman, Richard Saperstein, John Cusack, Living Dead, Main Characters, Michael Benaroya, Page Turner, Raggedy Man, Salems Lot, Samuel L. Jackson, Shara Kay, Tod Williams, Tower Series, Viacom


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Dolores Claiborne Summary

Stephen King, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Media Tie-In, Murder, Psychic, Psychological, Supernatural, Thriller

Dolores Claiborne

Published: November 1992
Author: Stephen King
Genre: Drama, Fiction, Horror, Media Tie-In, Murder, Psychic, Psychological, Supernatural, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Dolores Claiborne, a fiery 65-year-old widow living on the remote Maine island of Little Tall Island, is accused of murdering her wealthy, elderly boss, Vera Donovan

The novel is presented in the form of a transcript of her statement, as told to the local policeman and a stenographer. 

Dolores wants to make it obvious to the police that she did not murder Vera, whom she has cared for for years, but she does admit to organizing the killing of her husband, Joe St. George, nearly 30 years previously. 

Dolores' confession evolves into a narrative about her life, her rocky marriage, and her connection with her boss.

She begins by describing her connection with her boss, which began in 1949, when Vera and her rich husband bought a summer home on Little Tall Island and recruited Dolores as a maid. 

Dolores advances from maid to housekeeper in the Donovan mansion after proving her ability to meet Vera's ruthlessly rigorous standards. 

After Vera's husband is killed in a vehicle accident in the late 1950s, she spends more and more time at her island home, eventually relocating there permanently. 

Dolores becomes Vera's live-in carer and reluctant friend when she suffers a series of strokes in the 1980s. 

Dolores consoles the affluent woman while she suffers from horrific hallucinations of an entity she refers to as "the dust bunnies." 

Dolores combats Vera's developing mind tricks and power plays while she is conscious.

Dolores goes on to say that when she started working at the Donovan residence, her marriage to Joe St. George was already in trouble owing to his drunkenness and verbal and physical violence. 

Selena, Joe Jr., and Pete, their children, are completely oblivious of the abuse. 

Joe aggressively strikes Dolores in the small of her back with a piece of furnace wood after a minor transgression one night in 1960, escalating the marriage issues. 

Dolores shatters a porcelain cream pot over his head in retribution and threatens him with a hatchet, claiming she would murder him if he ever assaults her again. 

Selena, their adolescent daughter, is there throughout this altercation. Joe quits assaulting Dolores, and in an effort to preserve face, she lets him depart the island community. 

Selena is unaware that Dolores was abused and was acting in self-defense, and Joe exploits the hatchet event to get sympathy from her. Between mother and daughter, a schism emerges.

Dolores sees Selena has grown increasingly reclusive, fearful, unsociable, and unconcerned about her looks in 1962. 

Dolores confronts her daughter when they return home on the island boat, after assuming that she has met a boy or been engaged in drugs. 

She confesses the truth about the hatchet event, and Selena, without her will, admits her father assaulted her. 

Disheartened, Selena nearly jumps off the ship, but Dolores intervenes and calms her, promising to protect her. 

That night, she considers murdering Joe, characterizing the need to do so as an "inner eye opening." 

Instead, she confronts him, threatening to charge him if he ever approaches Selena again. 

Dolores eventually decides to leave Joe in order to protect her children. When she seeks to withdraw funds from her children's savings accounts in order to support their escape, she realizes that Joe has taken all she has accumulated. 

In despair, she bursts into tears at work, confiding in Vera. Vera, who is particularly compassionate, confesses that she has had some type of experience with Dolores' "inner eye," and casually notes that men like Joe frequently die in accidents, leaving their spouses little. 

As she walks away, she suggests that she caused the vehicle accident that killed her own husband and tells Dolores that "occasionally, an accident may be an unhappy woman's greatest friend."

Dolores begins arranging Joe's assassination, but she does not find a chance to carry it out until the summer of 1963. 

Vera gets preoccupied with a total solar eclipse that will be seen from the island, certain that it would persuade her estranged children to pay her a visit. 

She intends to host a large observation party on the island ferry. Dolores sends Selena to camp while sending Joe Jr. and Pete on a vacation to meet family since she thinks the island will be relatively desolate at that time. 

Dolores points out a dried-up stone well amid a clump of brambles on the outskirts of their land. 

Vera feels depressed and lashes out at her hired help when it becomes evident that her children will not be joining her at this time, only to be calmed down when Dolores confronts her about the wrongful dismissal of one of the maids.

Dolores buys Joe a bottle of scotch and cooks him a sandwich on the day of the eclipse, making him inebriated and comfortable, and they have a moment of physical tenderness for the first time in many years. 

Dolores gets a vision of a little girl in the line of the eclipse who is being sexually molested by her father at the same time the eclipse begins. 

Reminding herself of her goal, she purposefully enrages Joe by pretending she has recovered the money he took, leading him to assault her. 

She retreats into the brambles, fooling Joe into walking on the rotten planks that cover the well. The boards split, and he falls down the well, yet he is not killed instantaneously. 

He cries out for rescue for a while before losing consciousness. Dolores returns home and promptly falls asleep. 

She experiences a nightmare and then goes to the well. When she comes, Joe has recovered consciousness and is on the verge of climbing out. 

He grabs Dolores and tries to drag her in with him. She smacked him in the face with a rock, and he died and fell back into the well.

Joe is reported missing by Dolores, and his body is discovered after several days of searching. Despite the local coroner's suspicions and speculations, Joe's death is declared an accident. 

Dolores is no longer in Joe's clutches, but her actions have strained her connection with Selena, who believes her mother of murdering her father.

The narrative ultimately gets to the details of Vera's death, which prompted Dolores to recount her story. 

She admits that during one of her hallucinations, Vera managed to escape her wheelchair and flee in horror from "the dust bunnies," going down a flight of steps. 

Dolores gets a terrible vision of Joe's dust-covered ghost as Vera falls. Vera, who is still alive and cognizant despite her injuries, asks Dolores to let her end her pain. 

Dolores goes to get a rolling pin for Vera, but she dies before she can use it. The damning scene is discovered by the local postmaster, who accuses Dolores of murdering the elderly lady and forces her to contact the cops. 

Dolores is hounded and intimidated that night by members of the island community who believe she has previously evaded punishment for murder. 

The following day, Dolores receives a phone call from Vera's lawyer, who informs her, much to her surprise, that she has inherited Vera's entire fortune—nearly $30 million. 

Dolores first declines the money in favor of Vera's estranged children, but later discovers that they were killed in a car accident in 1961, and that Vera had spent the last 30 years of her life just believing they were still alive. 

Dolores convinces herself that the money will be used as a reason for murder, further complicating the case against her, and that the only way to cleanse her name is to confess everything. 

She concludes her remarks, finally at peace with herself. Several media pieces conclude the narrative by saying that Dolores was exonerated of any culpability in Vera's death and anonymously gave Vera's riches to the New England Home For Little Wanderers

The conclusion hints that Dolores and Selena have reunited and that Selena will return home for the first time in 20 years.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Charles Mulvehill, Christopher Plummer, David Strathairn, Eric Bogosian, Gerald Game, Jennifer Jason Leigh, John C. Reilly, Judy Parfitt, Kathy Bates, Little Tall, Main Character, Rose Madder, Tall Island, Taylor Hackford, Vera Donovan, Warner Bros


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Black House Summary

Stephen King, Peter Straub, American, Arthurian, Classic, Fantasy, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Murder, Paranormal, Psychic, Serial Killer, Supernatural, Thriller, Witches, Wizards

Black House

Published: 15, September 2001
Genre: American, Arthurian, Classic, Fantasy, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Murder, Paranormal, Psychic, Serial Killer, Supernatural, Thriller, Witches, Wizards
Book 2 of 3: Talisman (The third book has not yet been published.)

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

The community of French Landing, Wisconsin, has been plagued by a series of murders. The killer has been called "The Fisherman" because he made a determined attempt to imitate serial killer Albert Fish's tactics. 

The murderer in French Landing, like Fish, preys on youngsters and eats their bodies. As the narrative begins, two victims have already been discovered, with a third on the way. 

People all around the region are growing increasingly concerned as a result of the nature of the crimes and the local police's failure to apprehend the perpetrator, and certain segments of the local media are exacerbating the issue with inflammatory and provocative coverage.

Jack Sawyer has suppressed memories of his exploits in The Territories and his search for the Talisman as a twelve-year-old kid following the events of The Talisman; however, the residue of these events have served to subtly alter his life even after he has forgotten them. 

Jack rose through the ranks of the Los Angeles Police Department to become a lieutenant, where his professionalism and remarkable talent have earned him a near-legendary reputation. 

When a string of killings in Los Angeles is linked to a farm insurance salesman from French Landing, Wisconsin, Jack joins forces with the French Landing cops to apprehend the assailant. 

Jack is magnetically enthralled by the natural splendor of the Coulee Country while in Wisconsin, recalling his childhood experience in The Territories

Certain characteristics of the murder scene threaten to reawaken his suppressed recollections when he subsequently intrudes on a homicide investigation in Santa Monica. 

He then resigns from the Los Angeles Police Department and relocates to French Landing to enjoy his early retirement.

When the Fisherman begins terrorizing French Landing, the police practically beg Jack Sawyer for help, and are taken aback when he coldly refuses. 

The events of Santa Monica threaten to overwhelm Jack, and he thinks that becoming involved in the inquiry would cause him to lose his mind. 

When the Fisherman kidnaps a fourth child, Jack's aloofness is no longer possible. The Fisherman swiftly reveals himself to be much more than a serial killer. 

He is, in reality, a Crimson King agent tasked with locating youngsters who have the potential to serve as Breakers. Tyler Marshall, the fourth victim, is one of the most powerful Breakers ever, and he may be all the Crimson King needs to shatter the remaining Dark Tower beams and put an end to all worlds. 

Because the Fisherman may also "flip" into The Territories, Jack Sawyer is not just the sole chance for French Landing, but for all of existence.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Crimson King, French Landing, Hearts In Atlantis, Jack Sawyer, King And Peter, King And Straub, Sequel To The Talisman, Serial Killer


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Mr. Mercedes Summary

Stephen King, Action, American, Crime, Drama, Fiction, Hard-Boiled, Horror, Media Tie-In, Murder, Mystery, Police Procedurals, Serial Killer, Suspense, Thriller

Mr. Mercedes

Published: 3, June 2014
Author: Stephen King
Genre: Action, American, Crime, Drama, Fiction, Hard-Boiled, Horror, Media Tie-In, Murder, Mystery, Police Procedurals, Serial Killer, Suspense, Thriller
Book 1 of 3: The Bill Hodges Trilogy

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

When a Mercedes slams into a crowd of jobless people waiting in line for a job fair, sixteen people are killed and many more are injured. Bill Hodges, a recently retired detective from the local police department who is enjoying his retirement, receives a letter from someone claiming to be the person in charge of the employment fair and calling himself as "Mr. Mercedes." 

Hodges is divorced, lonely, and unsatisfied with his life to the point of suicidal ideation. When Hodges retired, the incident had occurred at the end of his tenure and remained unresolved. 

Mr. Mercedes is aware of the facts surrounding the murder and refers to Olivia Trelawney, from whom he took the Mercedes.

Olivia committed herself shortly after the incident as a result of her remorse. Instead of handing the letter on to his former police colleague, Pete Huntley, Hodges becomes fascinated and begins to examine the matter.

Mr. Mercedes is revealed to be Brady Hartsfield, an emotionally unstable psychopath in his late twenties who lost his father when he was eight years old. At his mother's request, he killed his mentally challenged sibling when he was a little lad. He currently lives with his alcoholic mother, with whom he has an incestuous connection, and works at an electronics store and as an ice-cream vendor. This second employment allows him to study Hodges and his neighbors, including seventeen-year-old Jerome Robinson, who helps Hodges with modest tasks.

Hodges meets Olivia Trelawney's sister Janey while conducting research on the rich Olivia Trelawney, and she engages him to investigate Olivia's suicide and the theft of the Mercedes. 

Janey and Hodges start dating shortly after Hodges starts working for her. With the aid of brilliant, computer-savvy Jerome, Hodges discovers how Mr. Mercedes stole the automobile and then drove Olivia (whom he met through his employment at the electronics shop) to suicide by putting unsettling sound files on her computer that was rigged to go off at random intervals, exacerbating her guilt. When Olivia first heard these sounds, she mistook them for the ghosts of the Mercedes Massacre victims.

Hodges meets Janey's unsavory family, including Janey's emotionally disturbed niece Holly, at the burial of Janey and Olivia's recently deceased mother. 

Mr. Mercedes stands by as Janey drives Hodges' vehicle to the church steps after the funeral. As the automobile approaches Holly and Hodges, he uses his remote gadget to contact a mobile phone on the car seat to blow up the car with Janey inside. 

Janey is killed as a result of the explosion. Hodges is remorseful, but he is even more determined to solve the crime without the assistance of the cops. In the inquiry, Holly joins Hodges and Jerome.

Hartsfield murders his mother by inadvertently poisoning her with a poisoned cheeseburger he had cooked for Jerome's dog. 

He planned to kill himself by pretending the need for a wheelchair and using explosives stashed within the wheelchair at a large concert for young girls, with her decaying body in their house. 

Hartsfield's true identity is discovered and his computer hard drives are searched by Jerome, Hodges, and Holly

They determine that Hartsfield's target is at the concert and race to the venue to intercept him. 

Hodges had a heart attack and is unable to join Holly and Jerome in the concert, but encourages them to continue. 

Holly tracks down Hartsfield and slams him in the face numerous times. Holly tracks down Hartsfield and uses Hodges' "Happy Slapper," a sock stuffed with ball bearings, to give several hard punches to his skull. On the concert floor, Hartsfield is bleeding and unresponsive.

Hodges who had been rescued by concert personnel, Holly, and Jerome get together for a picnic to talk about the previous happenings. 

Hodges has heard that he will not face criminal charges as a result of his activities in the Hartsfield case. Instead they were given medals by the city as a thank you for their efforts. Hartsfield, meantime, emerges from his coma and requests to visit his mother.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Bad Guy, Bill Hodges, Breeda Wool, Brendan Gleeson, Cat And Mouse, David E. Kelley, Harry Treadaway, Highly Recommend, Holland Taylor, Jack Bender, Jharrel Jerome, Justine Lupe, Kelly Lynch, King Novel, Looking Forward, Marty Bowen, Mary-Louise Parker, Page Turner, Really Enjoyed, Retired Cop, Retired Detective, Robert Stanton, Scott Lawrence, Twists And Turns, Well Written, Wyck Godfrey


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