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Black Butterfly (Lucifer Box)
 
 

Black Butterfly (Lucifer Box) [Kindle Edition]

Mark Gatiss
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

Kindle Price: $10.99 includes free wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
Sold by: Simon and Schuster Digital Sales Inc
This price was set by the publisher

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

British author Gatiss's third Lucifer Box novel (after The Devil in Amber) will appeal to those who prefer their humor broad and unsubtle. Box's legendary career in a secret arm of British intelligence during both world wars has included such achievements as having "prevented the revivified zombie of Captain Scott destroying New Zealand with his steam-dreadnought." In the early 1950s, a series of mysterious deaths around the globe following crazed behavior by the victims brings Box back into the game. The spy is on hand to witness the dying words of the latest victim, Sir Vyvyan Hooplah, who mentions the black butterfly of the book's title. With such unlikely allies as a man named Kingdom Kum, Box sets out to decipher the clues to a diabolical plot. Filled with over-the-top sequences, this parody lacks the cleverness of similar books like Hugh Laurie's The Gun Seller.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

"Belongs to a lineage which stretches from Sherlock Holmes to the indestructible James Bond. Giddily inventive and packed with delirious incident." -- The Times Literary Supplement (London)

Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 317 KB
  • Publisher: Scribner; Original edition (December 30, 2008)
  • Sold by: Simon and Schuster Digital Sales Inc
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B001O7Q9HG
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #290,906 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Lucifer Box returns!, January 31, 2009
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What a lush I am. I've been waiting and waiting for this, the third Lucifer Box book by the embarassingly talented Mark Gatiss, and wouldn't you know that instead of savoring it, I guzzled it down like a gin soaked rummy. Oh, well, as was the case with "The Vesuvius Club" and "The Devil in Amber," I'll just have to read this again (and again).

I want to write more. However, I don't want to spoil a single surprise or revelation. Lucifer Box is indeed back; older and wiser, and yet as randy as ever. Everything we've come to know and love about a "Box book" is here in spades: the adventures (amorous and otherwise), the indelible characters (outlandish names and all), the sex (Box is an equal opportunist in the bedroom, or the barroom, or the floorboards, or the alley...), the wit and the imagination. Whimsical, preposterous and compulsively readable; who could ask for anything more? Me. More. I want more Lucifer Box books.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Spy Who Goes Both Ways, January 9, 2010
The insatiable Lucifer Box returns in the latest wild entry in this hilarious yet thrilling series. Here the author has Ian Fleming squarely in his satiric sites and the opening Bond parody is sensationally funny. The pace is breakneck and there are more laugh-out-loud moments as the case unfolds for our slightly long-in-the-tooth hero. If anything this book is too short and you may want more - I certainly hope this isn't the last in this unique series.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A fitting--but above all, entertaining--conclusion!!, July 6, 2009
The first thing I noticed as I picked up Black Butterfly (Lucifer Box Novel The Last) was how thin it was in comparison to The Devil in Amber. A quick page check confirmed the sad news: Black Butterfly offers only 204 pages of rousing adventures and dark, delectable mysteries. Being an engrossing trilogy so far, the combination did not bode well for making this one last longer, teasing out the story with inordinate displays of self-control a few pages, perhaps even a chapter per day to extend the experience. In fact, at 204 pages the only promise Black Butterfly presumes with guaranteed witticisms, sharp humor, and delightful puns is the inability I would have in exerting my will power to put the book down. Instead of taking my time with this book, I jumped in with the same abandon I'd imagine Lucifer would recommend. After all, life's short and there's a lot of books I want to read!

Black Butterfly is Lucifer's swan song. His last adventure is filled with even more surprising revelations and a charming cast of puns intended to belay the wonderfully unsubtle and disarming humor and innuendos I've come to embrace and expect from a Lucifer Box novel. Lucifer has grown respectable in his old age (much to his regret); his years with the Royal Academy have been kind and his reputation and accomplishments have helped him rise through the ranks effortlessly to become the latest Joshua Reynolds. Finally the boss, Lucifer flirts with retirement, still determined to give it all one last go before his MI6 replacement (Allan Playfair) can settle in for the long haul.

Before Lucifer can wind down properly, there are matters to attend to. Namely, the funeral of beloved friend, Christopher Miracle, dead from mysterious circumstanced framed as a suicide and dropping off his son for an international scouting competition. The product of a more recent indiscretion, the boy arrived at his doorstep on Yuletide Eve and in the spirit of the moment Lucifer named him appropriately enough, Christmas Box. As unparental as I'd imagine Lucifer to be, Gatiss thankfully agreed and the "Father and Son" moments are hilariously awkward, grudging, and distracted. Considering Lucifer's extracurricular activities, this made for an excellent plot development, especially for the last book in the trilogy. Why I hadn't thought of this inevitability before is beyond me, but the surprise was worth the obliviousness.

When we last saw Miracle, he was suffering the lasting effects of psychological and physical injuries acquired during the first World War. However changed, he remained more or less stable, a soft shadow of his former self. But his funeral is a somber, confusing event. Lucifer is convinced Miracle was in no danger of committing suicide. Leaving the cemetery nursing a wounded ego (his advances spurned by a younger woman not interested in older men) and troubled by his friend's death, Lucifer determines to drink himself into oblivion at the Blood Orange, a club owned and operated by his former servant, Delilah.

His evening of relaxation is cut short when shots ring out and a man is found dead. Lucifer's last adventure is well under way! The plot is convoluted, the enemies are power-hungry, the torture is exquisite, and there's a new drug called le papillion noir (the black butterfly) but Lucifer still has it. The action is a bit tame, but still exciting with harrowing near-death experiences and soul-strengthening moments of true tenderness as Lucifer reminisces on the good old days while simultaneously showing the world why he's the Boss.

Black Butterfly is a different read from the first two novels. Gatiss writes an older, wiser, and nostalgic Lucifer with a notable slow in his step, but he never lets his age depress him for long. He's Lucifer Box after all and other than living up to everyone else's expectations, he must first of all live up to his own. Entertaining to the last, if you've read the first two, you can't do without Black Butterfly. The last chapter is totally worth it.
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