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A "chilling" (Publishers Weekly) thriller featuring Lucas Davenport. A family-killer known as the Iceman is freezing the blood of every mother, father, and child in rural Wisconsin.
The shattering New York Times bestseller by the author of Rules of Prey and Silent Prey. Lucas Davenport has tracked murderers in cities all across America, but he has never hunted a criminal as sinister as the Iceman of Wisconsin.
The author of four previous mystery thrillers starring Lucas Davenport ( Rules of Prey , etc.) evokes with precision and clarity two disparate, but equally unsettling types of harshness: the raw power of nature and the pitilessness of certain human beings. In a rural area of northern Wisconsin, a family of three is savagely wiped out by the Iceman, who then torches their house. In pursuit of a damaging photograph--a snapshot of him in a sexual situation with a local boy--this fiend puts no value on human life. Enter Davenport, the laconic, slightly cynical ex-cop from Minneapolis, who uncovers several disturbing truths before determining the Iceman's identity. The wintry climate is practically palpable here; numbing cold and blizzards prove as threatening as the Iceman's malevolence. Despite its chilling moments (literally and figuratively), this forceful narrative is tempered with an unexpected humanity, as evidenced primarily in the mature, slowly blossoming romance between Davenport and a local doctor. The moments of tenderness and humor shared by the rugged detective and this worldlywise Mother Earth figure stand in vigorous counterpoint to the surrounding events. Sandford casts a keen eye, too, on small-town life: he knows that everyone's peccadillos are grist for the rumor mill, and that secrets can quickly sour. A compelling vitality suffuses this novel, arguably the finest in a sterling quintet. (Mar.)
More Reviews and RecommendationsJohn Sandford, illustrator of Moonstick, The Seasons of the Sioux by Eve Bunting, studied drawing, painting, and illustration at the American Academy of Art in Chicago, IL. He lives in Grand Haven, Michigan. In His Own Words...
"I was born in Hannibal, Missouri, where we lived at the top of Hill Street in an old house that creaked with the adventures of five children and our parents. We later moved to Pontiac, Illinois, and filled a house with books, noise, crackpot ideas, and ill-tempered cats.
"I first heard stories at the family dinner table, but I was never quite clear about which were fact and which were fiction. I found more stories in the family library, some made vivid with illustration: N. C. Wyeth's robust Boy's King Arthur, Mead Schaeffer's painterly Three Musketeers, Maxfield Parrish's Arabian Nights, Robert Lawson's Rabbit Hill, and the curious drawings by Maud and Miska Petersham for The Rootabaga Stories."
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10/04/2009: I actually re-purchased "Winter Prey" because I couldn't find it in my library- which holds every other John Sandford novel.
Sandford's development of Lucas Davenport's character, along with exceptional dialogue and crisp detail of the surroundings of Minnesota combine with efficient plots to create excellent reads. I have read his books more than once and have enjoyed them each time. Fast moving, witty and with enough twists to keep me coming back for more.Reader Rating:
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05/26/2008: This book was very well written. Story was pretty solid and the characters fit and felt good to me. Davenport is a guy who everyone can relate to I think. I guess that makes him a good character. Sandford for whatever reason writes books that seem a little short to me, the story seems to go in one direction only - always. That is a disappointment after reading some great authors you hope the same from him but its never there. I have read 9 of his Lucas Davenports books and while they are all really good, the writing is just simple I guess is a good word. Straightforward with no thought required, it can get boring but with strong characters it can be done well enough. If you are looking for a good series with some grit this is for you, if you like guys who are intricate like Deaver for instance this book will dissapoint you terribly.