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(Mass Market Paperback - Reissue)
Average Customer Rating:
(62 ratings)
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A merciless killer on the hunt...an innocent child in his sights...a woman driven to the edge to stop him...
The killer knows Eve Duncan all too well. He knows the pain she feels for her murdered daughter, Bonnie, whose body has never been found.
The Killing Game is a masterpiece of chilling terror and powerful romantic suspense. Ms. Johansen is clearly at the top of her game!
More Reviews and RecommendationsWhile Iris Johansen's style has evolved over the years, the same skill that made her "one of the leading authors of romance fiction" (Barbara Kemp) has helped establish her reputation in a broader field. As Catherine Coulter noted, "Iris Johansen is a bestselling author for the best reason -- she's a wonderful storyteller."
More About the Author
Number of Reviews: 62
Average Rating:
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Write a Review
Amazin
DJ, an avid reader., 08/12/2008
I'm a new reader to Iris Johansen...this is the 2nd book I've read and I am a new addict! This book was great, the twists and turns kept me coming back all the time. I tend to read at night to help me relax before bed, but with this book, I had to make myself put it down and get some sleep. Often up until 1 or 2 am because I just couldn't put it down.
Also recommended: Killer Dreams, The search
Okay
Lisa, a social worker, 10/04/2007
Entertaining but I must say I'm not that big on the Eve Duncan story line. It's the same story over and over.
Also recommended: Irish Hearts by Nora Roberts No Where to Run by Iris Johansen Still Breathing by Lisa Burdziejko
More Customer Reviews
Name:
Iris Johansen
Current Home:
Near Atlanta, Georgia
Awards:
Romantic Times Career Achievement Award
After her two children left home for college, Iris Johansen decided to devote her newfound free time to writing. Since she loved reading romance novels, she penned a love story, and found to her surprise that "I was just as voracious a writer as I was a reader." During the 1980s, her name was emblazoned on dozens of slender volumes featuring spirited adventuresses, passionate mystery men, and smoldering love scenes. These days, Johansen is one of a posse of former romance writers dominating the New York Times bestseller lists.
Early on in her career, Johansen developed the habit of following characters from book to book, sometimes introducing minor characters in one novel who then become major figures in another. She developed families, relationships, and even fictional countries in her romance novels, which "stretched the boundaries of the standard formulas," according to Barbara E. Kemp in Twentieth-Century Romance and Historical Writers. In 1991, Johansen broke out of category romance (a term for short books written to conform to the length, style and subject matter guidelines for a publisher's series) with The Wind Dancer, a romantic-suspense novel set in 16th-century Italy. She followed it with two sequels, Storm Winds and Reap the Wind, to form a trilogy, then wrote several more stand-alone romance novels before The Ugly Duckling was published in 1996.
The Ugly Duckling was her first book to be released in hardcover -- and the first to significantly broaden her readership beyond her romance fan base. Since then, Johansen's plots have gotten tighter and more suspense-driven; critics have praised her "flesh-and-blood characters, crackling dialogue and lean, suspenseful plotting" (Publishers Weekly). Some of her most popular books feature forensic sculptor Eve Duncan, who first appeared in The Face of Deception in 1998. But Johansen seems equally comfortable with male protagonists, and her books have crossed the gender division that often characterizes popular fiction. Indeed, Publishers Weekly called The Search "that rarity: a woman's novel for men."
Johansen rewrote the ending of Reap the Wind for its reissue in 2002. "I couldn't resist tightening and changing the climax to correspond with my changed ideas on plot structure but the story is basically the same," she explained in a Q&A on her publisher's web site.
Many of her early novels were written for the Loveswept series from Bantam Books; bestselling authors Sandra Brown and Kay Hooper also wrote for the series.
A merciless killer on the hunt...an innocent child in his sights...a woman driven to the edge to stop him...
The killer knows Eve Duncan all too well. He knows the pain she feels for her murdered daughter, Bonnie, whose body has never been found. He knows that as one of the nation's top forensic sculptors she'll insist on identifying the nine skeletons unearthed on a bluff near Georgia's Talladega Falls. He knows she won't be able to resist the temptation of believing that one of those skeletons might be her daughter's. But that is only the beginning of the killer's sadistic game. He wants Eve one on one, and he'll use his ace in the hole to make sure she complies. And he won't stop playing until he claims the prize he wants most: Eve's life.
The Killing Game is a masterpiece of chilling terror and powerful romantic suspense. Ms. Johansen is clearly at the top of her game!
Johansen is at the top of her game with this sinuous thriller. Emotionally damaged and self-contained forensic sculptor Eve Duncan (The Face of Deception) makes a return appearance, along with her old friend, the cynical, coolly smart cop Joe Quinn. At the start of the book, Eve--devoted to forensic reconstruction since her eight-year-old daughter was murdered in Johansen's previous novel, her body never found--has abandoned the day-to-day world for life on a Tahitian island. Eve's tropical exile is interrupted, however, when Joe shows up to tell her that a pile of bodies has been discovered in the Georgia woods, including that of a young girl he believes may be Eve's daughter. Determined to reconstruct the skull and hoping to lay her daughter to rest, Eve returns to the U.S. Her arrival draws the attention of Dom, the psychotic serial killer responsible for the Georgia murders. Random attacks on social outcasts don't produce the rush they once did for Dom, and now he needs to up the ante, by stalking and murdering more prominent people and interacting with his victims before he attacks. Eve, whose story he has long followed in newspaper accounts, becomes his next target. Delaying their confrontation until he feels it will have full impact, he interrupts her reconstruction work, plants doubts in her mind about the details of her daughter's death and threatens to kill a young foundling--a redheaded girl like her daughter--whom she befriends. An enthralling cat-and-mouse game ensues, throughout which Johansen maintains perfect pacing, always revealing just enough to keep the reader turning the pages. Aided by smart and realistic dialogue, the suspense holds until the very end. Major ad/promo; BDD audio. (Sept.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.
In her newest thriller featuring forensic sculptor Eve Duncan, Johansen pits Eve against a serial killer who claims to have her long-lost daughter's body and who wants Eve to be his next victim. He further draws her into his game by hatching a plot to kill ten-year-old Jane MacGuire. Before long, Eve and Jane are on the run, barely steps ahead of the killer, and it seems that even the ever-faithful detective Joe Quinn and business tycoon John Logan can't save them. Reader Laurel Lefkow does a nice job working with the text: enhancing the suspense; conveying Eve's moods, which range from fear to anger to frustration; and revealing the closeness Eve begins to feel toward Jane and the budding romance between Eve and Joe. The reading is only marred by a jarring voice Lefkow creates for the FBI profiler assigned to the case. However, this is a production that will keep the listener guessing until the very last cassette. Highly recommended for popular collections.--Adrienne Furness, Maplewood Community Lib., Rochester, NY Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
The killings are lurid, the romance is lusty, and the zigzag plot zips along. You'll find your quick-read needs thoroughly sated.
Entertainment Weekly
The second of Johansen's suspensers starring Eve Duncan (The Face of Deception, 1998), a forensic sculptor who shapes human faces from the skulls of murder victims. The serial killer who murdered Eve's daughter Bonnie refused to tell her where he stashed the body. Eve has therefore devoted her life to bringing back her Bonnie and also the remains of other murdered children (the "lost ones"), so that their families can have the closure of a proper burial. In this she is helped by tough Atlanta PD detective Joe Quinn, whose marriage, thanks to his obsession with Eve, was conveniently dissolved in The Face of Deception. Continuing in his role of investigator, protector, and grief therapist, he now hopes to add lover to that list and to get moody Eve to take a few emotional risks. For some flimsy reasons that may be recognizable to other serial killers, another deranged murderer has targeted Eve because his 20-year killing spree has left him burnt out and he hopes that murdering Eve will give him a fresh new direction. This mysterious monster, called "Dom," tells her that he was really Bonnie's killer, and that he'll murder a ten-year-old girl, Jane, if Eve doesn't play his game. This gives Eve a chance to bond with Jane, a tough kid who like Eve was born in the slums of Atlanta, and to spend nearly all her time with Joe, a human guardian angel who seems never to sleep. Also watching over Eve is the ghost of Bonnie, who talks to her in dreams and is either a real angel or a figment of Eve's subconscious. Eve, Joe, and Jane, accompanied by the FBI, a journalist, and Sarah Patrick and her near-cadaver dog Monte, a golden retriever trained to locate bodies, pursue the increasingly bloodthirstykiller to Arizona, where they bring him down on the site of his tortured childhood. Johansen creates some nonconformist women characters along with heroes as devoted to them as golden retrievers.
Number of Reviews: 62
Average Rating:
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Write a Review
Amazin
DJ, an avid reader., 08/12/2008
I'm a new reader to Iris Johansen...this is the 2nd book I've read and I am a new addict! This book was great, the twists and turns kept me coming back all the time. I tend to read at night to help me relax before bed, but with this book, I had to make myself put it down and get some sleep. Often up until 1 or 2 am because I just couldn't put it down.
Also recommended: Killer Dreams, The search
Okay
Lisa, a social worker, 10/04/2007
Entertaining but I must say I'm not that big on the Eve Duncan story line. It's the same story over and over.
Also recommended: Irish Hearts by Nora Roberts No Where to Run by Iris Johansen Still Breathing by Lisa Burdziejko
one of the best
aaron (crazystupidhyfee@yahoo.com), a football player, 06/05/2007
iris johansen really did her thing is this cat and mouse book follwing the life of eve duncan.i think people of all ages would enjoy this book as i have and wiil read almost all of her books.
Better than the 1st
Erica W., A reviewer, 05/31/2007
After reading the 1st Eve Duncan book I was so disappointed. I thought it was horrible. Quite frankly Iris Johansen didnt impress me as an author. I can definately say this second book was wayyyyy better. I kinda have trouble with Eve's character but the plot was great and the hard twist at the end had me applauding. Im hoping Iris Johansen wins my heart with the next book I read. We will see. As for The Killing Game, overall good book and Id recommend it.
An edgy,mysterious,haunting novel you are bound to love!
Chickie 50, a junior!, 10/04/2006
Iris Johansen is at the top of her game again with her latest thrilling book The Killing Game. In between a romance and a mystery, this book keeps you on the edge of your seat. From growing up in a bad neighborhood and having a prostitute for a mom Eve Duncan has had a rough childhood. Then to top it all off, her daughter’s killer is back again to play a dangerous game. He knows a lot about Eve but does she know him? He is threatening not only those whom she loves but those whom she has never even met. Will he stop at just one kill or must it take others to entertain him. I really liked this book because each time I thought I knew what was going to happen, it changed and I had to keep reading to find out the next move. Also this book has a lot of edgy mystery but has just enough romance to make it the perfect book for me. If you like any of Johansen’s books then I definitely recommend this one. If you have read The Face of Deception then the next book for you is The Killing Game which in turn is followed by The Search. If you’re interested to see what happens to these characters then wait no longer and get your copy today.
Also recommended: On The Run
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