Verses for a dead man, by Lincoln and Child

Verses for a dead man
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The dream team of black literature, the incombustibles Douglas preston y lincoln kid, returns on the trio-hundredth installment of an Inspector Pendergast who will walk on the brink of collapse after so many tightrope cases.

But this is what special agents have, they are nobody without tension, without challenges that pose a touch of risk with which to park their personal shadows until those same shadows (call them past, call them ex-wife who hires a hitman to unblock two shots) loom over the protagonist of the day in some of his most lurid novels.

It is not the case of this novel that seems more wardrobe within the collection. A novel with its interesting core to clarify, loaded with the twists and turns of the great suspense storytellers and with its ramifications that intertwine like a vine in favor of a narrative tension worthy of great detective stories ...

Synopsis

Following the latest changes at the FBI office in New York, Pendergast is forced to accept an inconceivable condition to keep his job: The fiercely independent special agent must now work with a partner.

Pendergast and his new colleague, Agent Coldmoon, are assigned to Miami Beach, where a series of homicides by a bloodthirsty psychopath presents a puzzling modus operandi: the murderer rips out the hearts of his victims and leaves it - along with some mysterious handwritten letters - on different tombstones in local cemeteries. The graves are connected only by a strange circumstance: they all belong to women who committed suicide.

However, the apparent lack of connection between the old suicides and the new murders is soon the least of Pendergast's concerns. Because, as he delves deeper, the agent discovers that the crimes may be the tip of the iceberg ... and that he finds himself faced with a deadly conspiracy whose origins date back decades.

You can now buy the novel "Verses for a dead man", by Preston and Child, here:

Verses for a dead man
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