Ratings6
Average rating3.7
A boy vanishes on his way home from school. His frantic mother receives a ransom call: pay or else. It's only hours before the deadline, and the police have no leads. Enter Timothy Blake, an FBI consultant with a knack for solving impossible cases but whose expertise comes at a price. Every time he saves a life, he takes one, trying to satisfy an urge he fears he can only control for so long. And this time Blake may have met his match. The kidnapper is more cunning and ruthless than any he's faced before. And he's been assigned a new partner within the Bureau: a woman linked to the past he's so desperate to forget. Because he has a secret, one so dark he will do anything to keep it hidden.
Reviews with the most likes.
Didn't want to put it down
The perfect mix of macabre humor, action, and human behavior. The riddles were a fun bonus, I had to look a few up.
I want thank Netgalley HARLEQUIN - Hanover Square Press (U.S. & Canada)
Hanover Square Press and Jack Heath for my advanced copy of Hangman, I also want to apologize for my delayed review I finished this book in a day and was not able to write my review till today. Hangman is one of those books that you finish in one sitting add can't wait to get more. The FBI consultant in this book is a combination of Hannibal Lecter and Dexter put together and it's fantastic! Bears yes that means there are some awesome details that are so gruesome you'll either love it or hate it. So, if your idea of a great lunch isn't somebody's foot, then I would say skip it, but if your idea of great thriller is gore, guts and a thrill ride then this is the book for you. 5 Stars all the way. I just hope there's much more from this author to come.
Book Review - Mystery, Crime, and the Most Repulsive Protagonist in Literature.
https://medium.com/@peterseanEsq/book-review-mystery-crime-and-the-most-repulsive-protagonist-in-literature-2c1d2fbcaad5
Hangman by Jack Heath
This book tells serial killer/crime-fighter Dexter, “Hold my beer.”
This book introduces us to Timothy Blake. On one level, Blake seems like a decent guy. The FBI calls on him to find kidnapped children. He seems to be very observant and very smart. He puts together bits of information to make clever deductions, leading him to the missing children.
On another level, Blake is sketchy. We soon learn that he doesn't get paid for his consulting work. His income consists of identity fraud and solving puzzles. He lives with a drug dealer. He was in a group home as an orphaned child. His parents were killed when he was a baby.
Then, on a completely different level, we learn - and this isn't a spoiler since it is presented early in the book and described in the Amazon blurbs - that the deal Blake has cut with the local FBI head is that when he rescues a child, he gets a death row inmate to eat.
Surprise! (Or not.) Because of trauma when he was a baby, Blake is a cannibal.
The author, Jack Heath, set out to write a truly awful character and he has. However, as with Dexter, Heath loads the dice to make us sympathetic. Blake knows he's a monster. He has a sense of ethics, such as not allowing his roommate to rape a girl. He has been handed a bad start in life. The people he eats are dangerous scum, etc.
Blake is a “Marty Stu” character. He's too smart - he memorizes credit card numbers at a glance. He shares a house with a roommate and eats victims raw, but he has a way of disposing of bodies that raises no questions about him. He's aware of his pathology but develops habits to control it.
In other words, Blake is a fantasy character in a fantasy world.
Nonetheless, apart from his unfortunate culinary choices, Blake is a sympathetic character, probably because he's not a real person at all. Likewise, the mystery moves along on its invention, artifice, and coincidences. The ending is surprising enough, but, again, it is coincidence and artifice, and many “don't think too hard about this” connections.
I enjoyed the story but didn't like the fact that I enjoyed the story.
Am I going to read any of the sequels? I don't know. This book is a page-turner. Heath can rock a story. Life is short, though, and I'm not sure I want to squander my rapidly evaporating reading life expectancy by being provoked into concern for someone who eats other people raw.
Your tastes, though, may differ.