Hannibal Rising by Thomas Harris, Thomas Harris (Read by)

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(Audio - Unabridged)

  • Pub. Date: December 2006

    Reader Rating: (91 ratings)

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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: December 2006
    • Publisher: Random House Audio Publishing Group
    • Format: Audio

    Synopsis

    HE IS ONE OF THE MOST HAUNTING CHARACTERS IN ALL OF LITERATURE.

    AT LAST THE EVOLUTION OF HIS EVIL IS REVEALED.

    Hannibal Lecter emerges from the nightmare of the Eastern Front, a boy in the snow, mute, with a chain around his neck.

    He seems utterly alone, but he has brought his demons with him.

    Hannibal's uncle, a noted painter, finds him in a Soviet orphanage and brings him to France, where Hannibal will live with his uncle and his uncle's beautiful and exotic wife, Lady Murasaki.

    Lady Murasaki helps Hannibal to heal. With her help he flourishes, becoming the youngest person ever admitted to medical school in France.

    But Hannibal's demons visit him and torment him. When he is old enough, he visits them in turn.

    He discovers he has gifts beyond the academic, and in that epiphany, Hannibal Lecter becomes death's prodigy.

    The Washington Post - Douglas E. Winter

    Harris's writing is assured, with elegant shifts of tense and point of view; perhaps it is the focused plot or the insistently visual style that acknowledges the inevitable movie adaptation, but simply in terms of craft, Hannibal Rising is arguably the best of his novels.

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    Biography

    Insightful. Cunning. Mysteriously elusive. Wickedly dark. Such descriptions could just as easily apply to novelist Thomas Harris as they could to his most famous creation -- one of the most notorious literary (and cinematic) villains of all time, Hannibal Lecter.

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    Customer Reviews

    Hannibal Drowningby TheSeekerEO

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    September 03, 2009: Reading this book made me feel like this book didn't want to be written. It didn't have the same feel as Red Dragon, and especially Silence of the Lambs. It actually felt like a made up story. You know sometimes when reading a good book, you forget it's a story, you care about what happens? Not so with this book. It felt like the author didn't care what happened, like he was making it up as he went along. I only read it to complete the "series". I just started reading Hannibal, and it's like it was written by someone else entirely. So anyways, read it if you want, but it's really not very good.

    Not his bestby Hannibal_Gambit

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    May 03, 2009: This was not Harris's best work, he should have quit while he was ahead with "Hannibal". I did want to see what happened to Dr. Lecter but not what his child hood was like! The director should not have forced Harris to write another book. Instead of raking in the cash and redefining the Hannibal series he basically insured new people that Harris could not write a decent book. Harris should have just let this director to land flat on his face with a terrible movie. But the director just had to drag Harris down into the muck with him. This book should never have been made.


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