Mystery readers know John Sandford as the creator of the
memorable Prey series with Lucas Davenport, a Minneapolis police
detective, in the lead role in 31 books. Sandford is the pseudonym of John
Roswell Camp, an American author and journalist. Camp won the Pulitzer Prize in
journalism in 1986, and was one of four finalists for the prize in 1980. He
also won the Distinguished Writing Award of the American Society of Newspaper
Editors in 1985. In addition to his long-running Davenport series, he created a
spin-off with one of Davenport’s subordinates named Virgil Flowers, an
often-married smart aleck in the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension.
Davenport and Flowers join forces in Sandford’s latest, Ocean Prey
(Putnam, 2021).
The twelfth book with Flowers as the primary detective is Bloody
Genius (Putnam, 2019). When a well-known doctor and researcher is found
bludgeoned to death in his library study carrel at the University of Minnesota,
the Minneapolis police turned out in full force. After two weeks and no
arrests, the victim’s wealthy sister called the governor, who believed his
elevation to the governorship from district attorney was due in part to
Flowers’ work in Deadline (Putnam, 2014), possibly my favorite of the
series, and the governor pulled strings to have Flowers assigned to the case.
The first hurdle for Flowers to overcome was the hostility of
the Minneapolis police, who deeply resented his presence, then he sorted
through the public feud the late doctor had had with the chair of another
department at the University. At one meeting, violence between the supporters
of the two had broken out and everyone present had to be evaluated as possible
suspects. The discovery of a small supply of cocaine in a secret compartment of
the doctor’s home office took the investigation in a completely different
direction. One lead after another appeared in a lengthy investigation full of
surprises. That Flowers’ long-time girlfriend was expecting the birth of their
twins any day made him extremely anxious to wrap the case up so he could go
home.
Intricately plotted with more suspects than I remember in
other books in the series. Indirect jabs at the U.S. health care system are
woven in, as medical malpractice suits are discussed and the cost of providing
home hospice care comes up a couple of times. Flowers is the most likable of
Sandford’s many characters and he continues to deliver equal parts of charm and
competence in this book. Starred reviews from Booklist and Library
Journal.
·
Publisher: G.P. Putnam's Sons; First Edition (October 1,
2019)
·
Language: English
·
Hardcover: 384 pages
·
ISBN-10: 0525536612
·
ISBN-13: 978-0525536611
Aubrey Hamilton ©2021
Aubrey Hamilton is
a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries
at night.
2 comments:
I "think" I wrote the LJ review. Hard to remember, and when I checked, Amazon only says, "Library Journal". I love Virgil's adventures. He is the most likeable of Sandford's lead characters. You're right, Aubrey.
Me too.
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