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The Edge of Sleep (John Becker, Bk 3)
The Edge of Sleep - John Becker, Bk 3
Author: David Wiltse
In the quiet suburbs of New York, a frightening pattern is beginning to emerge. Children disappear without a trace - their bodies later discovered by the side of the road. FBI agent Karen Crist is at her wit's end -- because the murderer doesn't fit the standard serial-killer pattern. With former agent Becker, she manages to come face-to...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780399138805
ISBN-10: 0399138803
Publication Date: 10/14/1993
Pages: 320
Rating:
  • Currently 4.3/5 Stars.
 3

4.3 stars, based on 3 ratings
Publisher: Putnam Publishing
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review
Read All 4 Book Reviews of "The Edge of Sleep John Becker Bk 3"

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reviewed The Edge of Sleep (John Becker, Bk 3) on + 84 more book reviews
A good story line.
Elle avatar reviewed The Edge of Sleep (John Becker, Bk 3) on + 15 more book reviews
What a great author! I loved this book!
reviewed The Edge of Sleep (John Becker, Bk 3) on + 3152 more book reviews
I've tried to like this Becker series but now just can't stick with it:
1. pages and pages of just descriptions or 'thinking' and I just HATE that in a book
2. Becker is just whiny, it's always 'woe is me' 'poor me' and so on
3. stories just drag, usually they seem to start out good but then they just lag and drag---not for me
reviewed The Edge of Sleep (John Becker, Bk 3) on + 312 more book reviews
Wiltse's studies of psychopathic killers have been getting more and more streamlined. This tale of a couple who kidnap and murder ten-year-old boys is the most uncomplicated and efficient yet. FBI agent John Becker, on ``medical extension'' since killing Roger Dyce in Prayer for the Dead, is lured back into action by his one-time lover, Deputy Assistant Director Karen Crist. After spending a night with the photos of the six victims who've been snatched from field trips and shopping malls, beaten, and smothered weeks later--a vigil that has all of Wiltse's trademark weirdness--he gets on the trail of the kidnapper he dubs ``Lamont Cranston.'' But he'll never find Lamont in time to save the life of Bobby Reynolds-- the latest kidnap victim in suburban Connecticut--because Lamont doesn't fit the FBI profile: Dee, a frustrated maternal type who loves boys so much that she grabs them, and who has such high standards for their behavior that she insists on stringent discipline; and Ash, her big, dim sidekick, a killer whose bond with the victims is so deep that he's willing to kill them in order to save them further pain. While Becker--considerably more muffled than usual--and Karen pore over the evidence and fall back into bed, Dee takes Bobby to the Restawhile Motel, calls him ``Tommy,'' tickles his feet, makes him swear he loves her, and shows him off at a local McDonald's--even as the elderly proprietors of the Restawhile bicker about whether anything peculiar is going on in cabin 6. All this is unconscionable, because we know that Bobby's not going to be the last victim, since Karen has a ten-year-old son of her own.... Wiltse skillfully works a narrow margin of storytelling here. The suspense is merciless, stomach-churning.


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