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Sleepyhead

Author
Mark Billingham
Genre
Media
Book
Publisher
Sphere
ISBN
978-075153146
Reviewer
Gareth

Synopsis

It's rare for a young woman to die from a stroke and when three such deaths occur in short order it starts to look like an epidemic. Then a sharp pathologist notices traces of benzodiazepine in one of the victim's blood samples and just traceable damage to the ligaments in her neck, and their cause of death is changed from 'natural' to murder. The police aren't making much progress in their hunt for the killer until he appears to make a mistake: Alison Willetts is found alive and D.I. Tom Thorne believes the murderer has made a mistake, which ought to allow them to get on his tracks. But it was the others who were his mistakes: he doesn't want to take life, he just wants to put people into a state where they cannot move, cannot talk, cannot do anything but think. When Thorne, helped by the neurologist looking after Alison, starts to realise what he is up against he knows the case is not going to be solved by normal methods - before he can find out who did it he has to understand why he's doing it.

Review

This is one of the creepiest M.O.'s I've ever read - here the antagonist doesn't deliberately kill the victims: it's far more sinister than that. By subtly manipulating the ligaments in the victims necks he induces complete paralysis - the victim can not talk, walk, or do anything - they are in complete awareness but are in effect dead to any stimulation. The realisation of this is one of the "highlights" of crime fiction.

This is a great, edge of the seat read and a fresh take on the whole "serial-killer" sub-genre. For a debut novel, this is an assured and impressive masterpiece - read it, you won't be disappointed!

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