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Naked Prey (Hardcover)

by John Sandford (Author) "THURSDAY NIGHT, PITCH black, blowing snow..." (more)
Key Phrases: crime scene crew, comm center, ditch road, Kansas City, Martha West, Gene Calb (more...)
4.1 out of 5 stars See all reviews (104 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review
When twelve-year-old muskrat trapper Letty West stumbles on the naked bodies of Jane Warr and Deon Cash, deep in the snowy woods of northern Minnesota, it's more than another bizarre episode in her already unusual life, as Lucas Davenport discovers in this new outing in Sandford's popular series featuring the midwestern lawman who moonlights as a computer game designer. Lucas has a new wife, a new baby, and a new job as a political troubleshooter for his old boss Rose Marie Roux, but the blunt-spoken Davenport's instructions to hush the racially charged implications of what looks suspiciously like a lynching won't deter him from whomever left Warr and Cash twisting in the wind. The well-peopled plot, involving a hot car ring, an ex-nun who smuggles cancer drugs over the Canadian border, and the usual internecine wranglings between the FBI, the local cops, and Davenport, races to a satisfying denouement, but this time it's a little girl with a difficult past and an uncertain future who lingers in the reader's mind. Fortunately, Sandford comes up with an ending that makes it all but certain that his fans will meet her again. Meanwhile, all the author's usual trademarks are on display--excellent writing, an interesting scenario, and terrific pacing. --Jane Adams

From Publishers Weekly
Sandford gets back to basics in this stellar 14th installment of his hugely popular Prey series, focusing on the long-standing duo of Davenport and Capslock. As the novel begins, the indomitable Lucas Davenport (now happily married, a contented father and bored out of his mind) is slogging through the northern tundra of Broderick, Minn., to inspect the naked dangling corpses of a white woman and black man ("They were frozen. Like Popsicles.") that have shocked the locals as well as Minnesota's governor with the ugly specter of a lynching. Davenport, now more or less a free agent for the state's Bureau of Criminal Apprehension ("I kick people's asses"), is unleashed by the governor, giving Davenport and his scruffy sidekick, Del Capslock, a chance to escape their square city lives and catch the villain(s) while staving off the media vultures, Sandford's trademark subplot. As in previous novels, the original crime (rendered in a truly horrific opening sequence) is merely the gateway to a deeper, more insidious criminal enterprise, this one an international labyrinth of stolen cars, drugs, gambling and kidnapping. Some truly vicious familial machinations in the small town contrast well with Davenport's staid and stable home life. Another pleasant surprise is the precocious Letty West, whose awakening teenage sensibilities make an impression on Davenport. Sandford's usual background details (readers will learn how to run a muskrat trapline and how an Indian casino operates) are deftly woven into the fabric. This latest installment in a series now a decade and a half old is vintage Sandford.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Putnam Adult; First Edition/First Printing edition (May 12, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0399150439
  • ISBN-13: 978-0399150432
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars See all reviews (104 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #504,486 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in this category: (What's this?)

    #100 in  Books > Mystery & Thrillers > Authors, A-Z > ( S ) > Sandford, John

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Customer Reviews

104 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (104 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
31 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars John Sandford continues to ply his trade...., June 4, 2003
By L. Quido "quidrock" (Tampa, FL United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
with another entry in his fine "Prey" series, a group of books centered on Lucas Davenport, "the richest cop in Minnesota" (rich because he also designs video games).

Sandford set the stage for change at the conclusion of his last book, letting the reader percolate on what would be the differences in Lucas when he becomes an active father, and when he leaves the police department for a quasi-bureaucratic governmental position in a new state department headed by his old boss, Rose Marie Roux. Wisely, although Sandford went forward with these changes, the impact was streamlined by having 90% of the book's action happen in rural northern Minnesota, in the fictional small town of Broderick. Family man Lucas still has his best sidekick, Del, gainfully employed with him -- and married or not, he still can spot and appreciate a great looking woman. Some things never change!

The first two murders may be motivated by racial hatred - one victim is black, and his significant other is white...they are found brutally slain and hanging from a barren tree in the frosty Minnesota winter. There's so much odd and unusual "stuff" going on in Broderick, it's difficult for Lucas & Del to pin down the any information about the murders, and the killings continue.

Sandford manages to deftly interweave his social viewpoints -- his lack of respect for the media, his vague unsettlement with the way that federal, state and local authorities sometimes impede each other to solve a case that has generated media attention, and most importantly, his support of a little known grass roots campaign that is quietly smuggling prescription drugs from Canada to US patients who need and can't afford them.
Unlike many other writers of this genre, Sandford can keep both his tale of the crime and his social commentary moving in the same direction -- one does not eclipse or slow down the other.

The book is also notable in that it provides a lot of insight into tribal casinos...a staple of the Minnesota scenery in the last decade. Tribal casinos have changed rural Minnesota in many ways, and Sandford captures this contrast of big city activity with the rural tundra.

The prize of the novel, as many readers have commented, is new character Letty West, who will doubtless appear in future instalments. A precocious 12-year old, Letty's like many rural kids that come from dysfunctional single parent families....in the cities, kids from these homes tend to run with gangs...in the country, they tend to be loners, with old souls. Letty is such a character, and she's the best addition to the series in a long time.

This may not be the finest of Sandford's series, but its darn close! Don't wait for the paperback!

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26 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars fine police procedural, May 12, 2003
A lot has changed for Lucas Davenport in the last year. He married the love of his life Weather and they have an infant son and have moved into a new home with a separate apartment for the nanny/housekeeper. Rose Marie Roux is still Lucas's boss but she is now the Minnesota Public Safety Commissioner and Lucas reports directly to her and the governor as the Director in the Office of Regional Studies which is a part of The Bureau of Criminal Apprehensions.

Lucas gets the police cases that the local departments are not equipped to deal with or are political hot potatoes. His latest case involves a white woman and a black man hung by a rope to a tree and strangled to death. Lucas doesn't take long to identify the killer but when he goes to arrest him, he finds someone already murdered the perpetrator and his wife. Lucas returns to the small Northern Minnesota town of Broderick to find another killer but he doesn't realize that the small bucolic town is a cesspool of crime and corruption, a place where his homicide is interrelated to a series of other felonious acts.

There is nobody who writes a police procedural better than John Sandford. His plots are so complex that readers find themselves unable to put the book down until the last page is turned and all the loose ends are sewn up. NAKED PREY is one of the best novels in the series because the hero has undergone some radical changes both in his personal and professional life and that keeps the series fresh. This is a must read for fans of cop thrillers.

Harriet Klausner

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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Undoubtedly, Sandford's Best Lucas Davenport Novel, May 29, 2003
By Bookreporter.com (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
NAKED PREY is the thirteenth of John Sandford's Lucas Davenport mysteries, the thirteenth in thirteen years actually. The series has had its ups and, around WINTER PREY or NIGHT PREY, downs, but for the most part, Sandford has written consistently tight, suspenseful thrillers about the Minnesota police investigator who styles himself quite accurately as the state's richest cop. Nothing that has come before, however, will prepare Sandford's and Davenport's former and current fans for NAKED PREY.

NAKED PREY is far and away Sandford's best, a novel that succeeds on so many levels that it will leave readers shaking their heads in wonder. It begins and ends with brutal murders --- the first is a puzzle and the last is a given, but both are ultimately satisfying. What occurs in between --- the plotting, the characterization, the pacing --- will make you wish that NAKED PREY was twice as long.

NAKED PREY finds Davenport comfortably ensconced in a position known as "Director --- Office of Regional Studies," which in turn is part of the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA). Davenport reports directly to his old boss, former Minneapolis police chief Rose Marie Roux, and through her to the governor. Davenport's job is to fix things (the actual terminology that Sandford employs is a bit more, uh, graphic than that) when a crime on the local level becomes too complicated or touchy.

When a black man and white woman are found dead, victims of an apparent lynching in upstate Minnesota, the call goes out to Davenport to get the job done. Davenport and his running partner, Del Capslock, are soon in the tiny town of Broderick in rural Custer County investigating the deaths, and lives, of Jane Warr and Deon Cash. Davenport slowly discovers that there is far more going on in the quiet streets of Broderick than they would ever suspect.

The murders of Warr and Cash are only the first of many that take place during the course of NAKED PREY. Sandford pulls a really neat trick here. The reader gradually finds out what is going on --- and there is quite a bit --- but is ahead of the curve. The suspense comes into play as the reader watches Davenport painstakingly work his way through the labyrinth of secrets that Broderick holds to his heart. And, as NAKED PREY reaches its conclusion, the question becomes not how Davenport finds out who is behind the multiple murders, but whether he'll find out. And don't presuppose that you already know the answer to that one.

Readers who have stuck with the Davenport series since its inception will find that Sandford, aiming for the moon and stars, has reached the moon and stars. For those who haven't read a Davenport book for a while, or who are unfamiliar with the series, NAKED PREY is the place to jump on, right now. Whether you're looking for a police procedural series that is new to you or not, you need to become familiar with Lucas Davenport and you need to start with NAKED PREY. Very highly recommended.

--- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Exactly as advertised

NAKED PREY is exactly what you think it should be- a fast paced page turner, fairly predictable, but with enough action and suspense to make you want to finish. Read more
Published 23 days ago by J. Carroll

2.0 out of 5 stars Is it just me or does anyone else care?
I read this book via audio. I like the writing style and the story was fair, but I will agree with other reviews, all the crime going on in this small town lost some credibility... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Christie Smith

5.0 out of 5 stars Well-Developed Characters + Complex Plot = Great Read
This is the first Sandford book I have read. I was struck particularly by the depth to which the characters are defined. Read more
Published 6 months ago by Bruce A. Ishikawa

5.0 out of 5 stars Naked meets Winter as a favorite "Prey".
There's something about small towns in the dead of winter that make for excellent Prey novels. Part of that goes out to the way that the author captures the charms and... Read more
Published 6 months ago by Evan the Dweezil

5.0 out of 5 stars NEVER DISAPPOINTED BY THIS AUTHOR
IF I had known there would be so many 'Prey' novels I would have kept a list of the titles, as it stands now, I may never remember which I had read and have not!! Read more
Published 8 months ago by Dorothy J. Blessett

3.0 out of 5 stars 3.5 stars
This is a new-to-me author. Several friends enjoyed his books, so I decided to give him a try.

Unfortunately, it's in the middle of a series about Lucas Davenport... Read more
Published 12 months ago by D. K. Stokes

4.0 out of 5 stars Cold, crisp like winter
I listened to this book on cd. There are sound effects when you listen...a crash, a gunshot, etc. A fastpaced book that gives you characters you want to know more of. Read more
Published 14 months ago by L. Lubenow

2.0 out of 5 stars Forgettable Entry in a Great Series
I'm a huge fan of John Sandford's PREY series. The character of Lucas Davenport is a terrific protagonist and normally I thrill to his latest case involving some of the most... Read more
Published 15 months ago by M. E Grant

5.0 out of 5 stars Winter in Minnesota brings a potential tinder-box blaze
In this, the 14th Lucas Davenport novel, John Sandford keeps doing what he does best - that is writing a book that keeps us wanting more. Read more
Published 18 months ago by K. Sozaeva

3.0 out of 5 stars Naked just not too thrilling for me
I entered into the "Prey(Lucas Davenport)" series with "Chosen Prey" and followed that up with "Mortal Prey. Read more
Published on November 13, 2006 by Lifesamystery

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