Series: Book 4 in the Lincoln Rhyme series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: Detective, Lang:en
Summary
LINCOLN RHYME RETURNS! First introduced in the spine-chilling novel
The Bone Collector, Lincoln Rhyme dazzled readers
with unparalleled forensic sleuthing - all done from the
confines of a wheelchair. A famed criminologist, paralyzed
from the neck down, Rhyme compensates for his physical
disability with his brains - and the arms and legs of his
brilliant and beautiful protégée, Amelia Sachs. It
is Amelia who "walks the grid" for Rhyme, acting as his eyes
and ears for the famously dangerous and difficult cases
chronicled in Jeffery Deaver's bestselling novels
The Bone Collector, The Coffin Dancer, and
The Empty Chair.
Now the awe-inspiring duo returns in
The Stone Monkey. Recruited to help the FBI and the
Immigration and Naturalization Service perform the nearly
impossible, Lincoln and Amelia manage to track down a cargo
ship headed for New York City and carrying two dozen illegal
Chinese immigrants, as well as the notorious human smuggler
and killer known as "the Ghost." But when the Ghost's capture
goes disastrously wrong, Lincoln and Amelia find themselves
in a race against time: to stop the Ghost before he can track
down and murder the two surviving families who have escaped
from the ship and vanished deep into the labyrinthine world
of New York City's Chinatown. Over the next harrowing forty-eight hours, the Ghost
brilliantly and ruthlessly hunts for the families, while
Rhyme, aided by a quirky policeman from mainland China,
struggles to find them before they die, and Amelia Sachs
pursues a very different kind of police work - forming a
connection with one of the immigrants that may have
consequences going to the core of her relationship with her
partner and lover, Lincoln Rhyme.
The Stone Monkey abounds with Deaver's famous
trademarks: wholly unexpected plot twists, breakneck pacing,
and characters who are heartbreakingly real, reminding us
once again why
People hailed him as "the master of ticking-bomb
suspense" and
Publishers Weekly called him the "most clever
plotter on the planet."