Amazon.com Review
Susan Clayton, a professional puzzle maker, is stumped by this anonymous note left at her door: "THE FIRST PERSON POSSESSES THAT WHICH THE SECOND PERSON HID." Distracted by the sweltering Florida Keys evening and her cancer-stricken mother in the next room, Susan spends hours before she solves the riddle--it means "I have found you." Ominous words, considering that a serial killer is stalking Florida. And in this novel, Florida is ominous to begin with: it's set in a
Robocop-like future society where people carry semiautomatics like breath mints, road rage reigns, and folks gladly trade their right to privacy for a place in a protected community called the Fifty-first State (Katzenbach's scary takeoff on Disney's planned town of Celebration, Florida). Meanwhile, Susan's brother Jeffrey, an authority on serial killers, is finishing up a lecture when his silent security alarm flashes. His metal-detecting alarm was set off by special agent Robert Martin of "State Security" (an American-style SS), who confronts the good professor with some bad news about his late father, a psychopath. Could he be the one who left Susan that threatening note? Can anybody stop the Fifty-first State from getting even scarier? With mounting suspense, Jeffrey, Susan, and their ailing mother put their heads together to keep the futuristic body count from getting wholly out of control. There is perhaps a touch less gore than Katzenbach fans may be used to, but no fewer thrills. He has seen the future, and it will make your hair stand on end.
--Rebekah Warren
From Library Journal
In his new novel, Katzenbach (Just Cause, LJ 7/92) portrays the machinations of a self-styled omniscient murderer who is made more frightening by what is left unsaid than by what is said. In the not-too-distant future, Jeffrey Clayton, a psychologist and expert tracker of serial killers, learns about several vicious killings in the Western Territory, the only "safe zone" in the continental United States. Everyone elsewhere, including Jeffrey's sister, Susan, who writes word puzzles for a Florida newspaper, carries an arsenal of weapons. Years ago, the Claytons' mother had fled with her children when she recognized that her husband was a murderer. Now he is freely killing young women in the Western Territory while stalking and playing mind games with his daughter. Soon the entire family is assembled in the West to play out a deadly contest. Katzenbach is a master at creating believable people caught up in horrific situations. Librarians can recommend this title to anyone who wants a well-written suspense novel dealing with the serial killer but without most of the usual accompanying gore.?Jo Ann Vicarel, Cleveland Heights-University Heights P.L., Ohio
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.