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The Face of Death

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In Shadow Man, Cody McFadyen took the suspense thriller where other writers have feared to tread. He introduced readers to a heroine every bit as dark and edgy as the serial killers she hunts: Special Agent Smoky Barrett. Now, in his latest novel, McFadyen brings Agent Barrett back to track down a killer who breaks all the rules. 
“I want to talk to Smoky Barrett or I’ll kill myself.
The girl is sixteen, at the scene of a grisly triple homicide, and has a gun to her head. She claims “The Stranger” killed her adoptive family, that he’s been following her all her life, killing everyone she ever loved, and that no one believes her.
No one has. Until now.
Special Agent Smoky Barrett is head of the violent crimes unit in Los Angeles, the part of the FBI reserved for tracking down the worst of the worst. Her team has been handpicked from among the nation’s elite law enforcement specialists and they are as obsessed and relentless as the psychos they hunt; they’ll have to be to deal with this case.
For another vicious double homicide reveals a killer embarked on a dark crusade of trauma and death: an “artist” who’s molding sixteen-year-old Sarah into the perfect victim—and the ultimate weapon. But Smoky Barrett has another, more personal reason for catching The Stranger—an adopted daughter and a new life that are worth protecting at any cost.
This time Smoky is going to have to put it all on the line. Because The Stranger is all too real, all too close, and all too relentless. And when he finally shows his face, if she’s not ready to confront her worst fear, Smoky won’ t have time to do anything but die.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from March 26, 2007
      McFadyen's outstanding sequel to his debut, Shadow Man
      (2006), provides a chilling reminder: "However bad things may become, evil men only triumph in the most important ways when we let them." FBI Special Agent Smoky Barrett is barely back in fighting form six months after killing the man who murdered her family and best friend before she must deal with another threat. "The Stranger," a serial killer seeking revenge for a miscarriage of justice, has targeted 16-year-old Sarah Langstrom, who asks for Smoky's help after the Stranger kills Sarah's latest foster family. The Stranger's murder spree actually began on Sarah's sixth birthday with her biological parents and dog. Smoky's crackerjack L.A. Violent Crimes Unit whirls into action to catch a monster who inflicts pain on Sarah by systematically killing anyone she loves. Smoky's fierce first-person narrative and Sarah's eerie diary excerpts, supplemented by a great cast, lift this scary thriller far above the usual serial-killer norm.

    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2007
      You don't want to be at the watering hole where the dark things drinkbut Smoky must, to catch a serial killer. McFadyen's ("Shadow Man") sequel begins with Special Agent Smoky Barrett trying to decide whether to accept a teaching transfer to Quantico when she and her team are called to the scene of a vicious triple homicide. Sixteen-year-old Sarah, the sole survivor, threatens suicide unless she's allowed to speak to Smoky. Sarah claims that a man known only as "The Stranger" has been targeting her since she was six by killing everyone she has ever loved. Smoky is the first to believe her. Thus begins the case to find the identity of "The Stranger" by deciphering his motive in ruining Sarah's life. McFadyen's sophomore work is more dramatic than its predecessor but just as brutally vivid. The story interweaves Smoky's pursuit with Sarah's journal entries, which detail this inhuman killer's past crimes. This makes for a gripping tale with an ending as shocking as it is tragic. Strongly recommended for all public libraries. [See Prepub Alert, "LJ" 2/1/07.]Susan O. Moritz, Montgomery Cty. P.L.s, MD

      Copyright 2007 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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