The 3 best books by Jeffery Deaver

In the field of the most intense thriller or suspense, Jeffery Deaver He is the one who dances the best, almost always. I am referring above all to the imposed pace. A frenetic cadence, I bet achieved from a task after the writing itself.

Deaver finishes his story and prepares to sift, throwing the straw into the air and leaving the narrative more intense. Schematization will also help those ramifications typical of a Deaver that lead us to a dead end while the twist appears, the final effect of the writer of this type of genre.

Taking a taxi is never the same since the bone collector appeared in our lives. And when a novel transcends fiction to something so everyday it is because the author has been able to insert into our imagination one of those fears that have come to stay as a memory of a reading exercise towards that strange morbid taste for terror.

The taste for the saga is also one of the characteristics of this author. The best known of his series in Spanish is that of  Lincoln rhyme, the quadriplegic criminologist and investigator who gives his dark life of seclusion to the clarification of the most heinous murders.

That duality already seen on other occasions in which one character is the brain and another the executor (a drift already originated in Sherlock Holmes and John H. Wattson of Arthur Conan Doyle), acquires in Deaver's plots an even more unique connection towards the richest complementarity.

With a very dark touch to Dennis Lehane and a final delivery to verve in the narrative tempo of the best Michael connelly, discovering Deaver is entering a thriller that always leaves the reader speechless.

Top 3 Recommended Books By Jeffery Deaver

Crosses on the road

The second part of the trilogy about agent Kathryn Dance. On this occasion, Kathryn faces a murderer who enjoys playing a macabre game about the lives of young women whose death she already anticipates.

The darkest Internet serves as a breeding ground for all those potential victims that are young people to approach the abyss of the most wicked minds.

A novel that is introduced into a thriller full of the sensation of drama that can be the loss of so many young lives and to which also hints of romanticism appear, like a dish of haute cuisine with those contrasts only available to the best chefs. Kathryn Dance will have before her one of the most insane cases.

The clues are lost between our reality and the virtuality of so many lives exposed to the deepest Internet where knowledge and hatred, knowledge and death live (or at least towards that notion the plot is oriented).

A fascinating ending in which Kathryn's gift for understanding the human psyche, from the most imperceptible details, will serve to leave us suspended for moments over the plot, about to descend into a dizzying final scenario.

Crosses on the road

The sleeping doll

The first novel in the saga of the fascinating researcher Kathryn Dance. The letter of introduction of a character that points to these new forms of modern investigation, polished to the extreme to determine personalities or modus operandi of the criminal that can serve to anticipate any step.

But there are always criminals who escape any profile, any forward-looking intention on the labyrinths of the minds. Daniel Pell, cruel killer, is Dance's perfect nemesis.

In their meeting, Dance was already able to see how Pell discovered each of her intentions, how she observed her behavior. And in the end perhaps he was the one who proposed his own gestures towards a deception worthy of someone who knows more than he should ever know.

Pell could have the innate gift of anticipating that science of behavior in which Dance was a master... So when Pell escapes, Dance is the best one to find him, only this time she will feel more helpless and doubtful than ever.

The sleeping doll

The bone Collector

I have serious doubts about which is the best novel in the Rhyme saga. In any of the works of the quadriplegic criminologist we find true gems of deduction against the clock. But since this was taken to the cinema to end up bordering on that level of masterpiece of the seventh art, I proceed to recommend it as the most relevant in this saga.

The truth is that knowing the origin of such a profuse work always provides added value, a knowledge that clarifies a multitude of details in subsequent readings. Because here we find the Lincoln Rhyme facing the misery of his life in complete disability. There is no hope or illusion.

But the fact of being able to investigate cases from his limited world gives him back a minimum of faith, a resilience, a sublimation that can keep him from the abyss.

And so he begins to investigate the most sinister taxi driver, capable of killing his victims while removing a bone as a trophy. The beginning of the tandem with Amelia Sachs is also another reason to start at the beginning of a saga of independent readings but linked in their essence.

The Rhyme Sachs team begins to carbure. And the shadow of the bone collector looms over them, only Rhyme is not afraid of death and they can think as clairvoyantly as the killer himself to finally find him.

The bone Collector
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