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Crosscut (Evan Delaney Mysteries)

By: Meg Gardiner
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Hodder Paperback
ISBN: 0340829400
ISBN-13: 9780340829400
Released: 30 Jan 2006
RRP: £6.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

A book you want to sit down and devour in one go! - By: R. Taylor, 22 Dec 2006
I started this 2 days ago & alll I want to do is read read read! Delighted to have recently discovered this excellent thriller writer recently this is my second Meg Gardiner book & I just can't get enough. A fast paced thriller, with a plot that twists & turns & extremely likable characters. I want to be Evan Delaney!
Class Reunions American Style - By: A. Hanson, 07 Dec 2005
Summary: An E-Ticket Ride

Meg Gardiner is at it again, & you can thank your lucky stars that she is. "Crosscut" is Gardiner's fourth book in the Evan Delaney series & is her most action-packed, riveting thriller to date. Who knew that a class reunion could be so dangerous, & so brutal?

Delaney returns home to China Lake for her high school reunion, & finds murder & mayhem waiting. Someone is annihilating her classmates, one graduate at a time. As the body count adds up, Delaney feels the targeting scope on her. Who is it who is killing these kids from the California high desert? And why?

Gardiner pulls no punches in this book, attacking the reader's sensibilities as the killer mauls his victims. This is not a book for weak temperaments. Gardiner knows how to engage her readers--and then take them for a wild ride. Blood & Guts Patton has nothing on her. And yet, none of the gore is gratuitous. It drives her characters & her story.

As with her other books, Gardiner adds her own twist to the classic suspense thriller--humor, as only she can write it. Just when you think you can't take the violence or tension any more, along comes Cousin Tater or other comic relief, & you're shoulders drop from around your ears & you breathe a sigh of relief.

For a moment.

Then you're off again on Delaney's wild ride.

Since her first book, "China Lake", Gardiner has combined skillful plotting with excellent character development. She knows exactly who her characters are & writes them with such color & understanding that her readers also know them, & what to expect from them.

Like P.D. James & Ruth Rendell, Gardiner achieves more than mere thriller or mystery. Never run-of-the-mill, she continues to delight readers with excellent writing. She paints pictures & composes cacophony with mere words.

Gardiner never disappoints. Pick up her books & you're guaranteed thrills & chills. Is old Disneyland parlance, it's an E-ticket ride!


Oh, yes - By: jim_noy, 19 Nov 2005
With “Crosscut” Meg Gardiner sends us hurtling down the well-travelled paths of the serial killer novel, & turns in a truly blazing thriller. Inside of the conventions of such a novel she carves her own distinctive niche, applying deviousness & trickery to a plot that sweeps you up & carries you along from quite literallly the first page to the last. Gardiner’s books have each put a welcome spin on the thriller genre, & the accessible way she approaches this one continues this trend; even if the plotting can seem a little episodic at times, there is no denying Gardiner’s talent for writing stories that compel you to read them, & that live on in your head long after you have stopped reading.

This reallly is first-rate thriller writing; occasionallly brutal, consistently inventive, always honest. The darker aspects of proceedings are again balanced with just the right amount of humour (the “Airplane!” reference is, frankly, inspired) without ever being distasteful or interrupting the pressing tone. Any concerns I had that she may have been overloading the book in the first half were put to rest by a storming second half which simply does not let up, & which resolves everything skilfully & convincingly.

As ever, I cannot praise her characters too highly – Gardiner understands these people & their relationships perfectly, & conveys it alll in a way that makes this novel about so much more than people getting killed. The impressive thing is how she does this without ever losing sight of the fact that the primary objective of any thriller is to thrill – she dovetails her plot & her characters almost seamlessly, giving the characters space & time to establish & distinguish themselves whilst the plot thrums in the background, ready to pounce out & blindside you at a moment’s notice. This means that you are never reallly on a sure footing with her, as she is free to hit you with an unexpected emotional punch when required, or to deliver a couple of great surprises. You can’t ask for much more than that.

Gardiner is getting stronger with every book – which is no mean feat when you consider how strongly she started with “China Lake” – & this is very likely to be the best thriller I will read this year. Sign me up now for whatever comes next.