 |
 |
|
|
 |
> The Stone Monkey (A Lincoln Rhyme Novel) |
|
|
 |
| |
see larger picture
|
|
Author:
Jeffery Deaver
By Simon & Schuster
Average Customer Rating:     
List Price: $25.00
Our Price: $0.94
|
|
|
|
Binding: Hardcover Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780743221993 ISBN: 0743221990 Label: Simon & Schuster Manufacturer: Simon & Schuster Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 432 Publication Date: 2002-03-12 Publisher: Simon & Schuster Release Date: 2002-03-12 Studio: Simon & Schuster |
|
|
|
Product Description
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."
Amazon.com Review When a vicious smuggler known as the Ghost scuttles a ship filled with undocumented Chinese immigrants less than a mile from New York harbor, only a handful of survivors--and the Ghost himself--manage to escape the burning vessel. Lincoln Rhyme, the quadriplegic NYPD forensic detective first introduced in 1997's The Bone Collector, and Amelia Sachs, his partner and lover, must stop the Ghost before he murders the two families who made it to shore. The families have gone to ground in the all but impenetrable world of Manhattan's Chinatown, a fact that makes the pair's two allies--Sonny Li, a Chinese cop, and Dr. John Sung-- invaluable partners. The group's race against time showcases Jeffery Deaver's many talents, particularly intricate plotting, plenty of surprising twists, and breakneck pacing. This is a real standout from a writer whose previous thrillers have earned him a solid following among mystery fans. --Jane Adams
|
|
    Steady thriller, 2010-02-22 This book had many of the twists and turns Deaver is known for. It moved at a steady pace and didn't completely overwhelm the reader with over the top research. There wasn't a lot of character development but Lincoln and Co. stayed true enough to be accessible to readers who pick up the series here.
    A great story, but beware the phony Chinese medicine & feng shui "insights", 2009-08-18 I'm a Deaver fan, and my wife is a doctor of classical Chinese medicine and practitioner of classical feng shui. So, I was happy to see both of these valuable and fascinating ancient disciplines incorporated into a popular novel...and in what seemed to be a respectful manner. Unfortunately, Jeff Deaver is no Lincoln Rhyme: he doesn't do his research. The Chinese medicine "insights" were superficial at best, and dangerously wrong at worst. He introduced the feng shui section with one of his characters admonishing someone for referring to it as "interior decorating", and then proceeded to describe it in that same interior decorating manner. It's not just that he doesn't understand it: whoever was advising him on it got it dead wrong in many cases (for instance, a feng shui master would never "trap" energy, as described in the novel). Deaver probably got his Chinese medicine knwoledge from some American MD who took a weekend course. In the US, the powerful, monopolistic AMA has forced Chinese medicine schools to allow MDs to take a few hours of training on the weekend, and then call themselves Doctors of Chinese Medicine or acupuncturists. They apparently have never heard that a little knowledge can be dangerous, which is why the majority of complaints against acupuncturists are against these phony ones with MD after their names. Making matters worse is the prevalence of the TCM (traditional Chinese medicine) school in the US, a dumbed-down version of classical Chinese medicine. It was invented by an Englishman about 40 years ago. And Deaver's feng shui consultant was almost certainly a member of the Black Hat cult from California. This is a scam that's a cross between Amway and Scientology. It attracts people desperate for extra income, teaching them a childishly-simplifies--and mostly bogus--interior decorating approach they dare to call "feng shui". Please, Mr. Deaver: do your homework next time.
    Disappointing..., 2008-12-26 This is the first Deaver book that I have read, or rather tried to read. It started off well and I was excited for a good read!!!! Somewhere in the middle the book bogged down and it could be just me but the character of Lincoln Rhymes annoyed me to no end! He came off as a know it all spoiled kid/puppet master!! That and the fact that the book took turns and had dialog that were unneeded and slowed things down ruined the book for me. I got 3/4 of the way through it and then put it down to finish two other books and didn't care what happened in this one! It goes with my rule this book is like 500+ pages where only 350+ are relevant and needed! I will probably read another Deaver book, but not another Lincoln Rhyme based one!
    One of my Favorite Authors, 2009-08-25 Jeffery Deaver is one of my ALL TIME FAVORITE AUTHORS! He has so many twists & turns in his books, you never know what to expect next! Although each novel in the "Lincoln Rhyme Series" stands alone, you will probably want to start with the first book in the series, titled "The Bone Collector". It enables you to get to know and appreciate the characters so much more as they grow & develop throughout the books. If you've read some of Deaver's earlier books/series, namely, the "The Rune Series" or the "The John Pellam Series", and did not enjoy them, please do not judge ALL of his books by those. His writing style changes completely with the "Lincoln Rhyme" books and if you like mystery & suspense, you will LOVE these! This is book #4 in the series!
    a good read loaded with information, 2009-08-10 Jeffery Deaver does a lot of research for these novels like The Blue Nowhere: A Novel.
He still got Chinese that had a Charlie Chan fortune cookie feel to them?
His Chinese are very like characterizations of Italian Catholics by protestants?
Although he tries to get into the pagan mind of his Chinese snakehead
smuggler, the failure is that the result isn't
believable to me? Catholics have their saints and the Chinese have their lessor Gods,
but sometimes the result is a lot like carrying a rabbit's foot for luck?
The modern Chinese are very modern and very rational.
I liked the effort to get inside Chinese heads here, anyway;
I picked up at least 3 Chinese curse words in this book.
The crime-scene investigator theme is an interesting modern approach to detective stories too.
|
|
 |
|
| |