Buy new:
$28.76$28.76
FREE delivery August 11 - 12
Ships from: YourOnlineBookstore Sold by: YourOnlineBookstore
Save with Used - Like New
$17.99$17.99
FREE delivery Friday, August 8 on orders shipped by Amazon over $35
Ships from: Amazon Sold by: Summit Sales CO.
Return this item for free
We offer easy, convenient returns with at least one free return option: no shipping charges. All returns must comply with our returns policy.
Learn more about free returns.- Go to your orders and start the return
- Select your preferred free shipping option
- Drop off and leave!
Sorry, there was a problem.
There was an error retrieving your Wish Lists. Please try again.Sorry, there was a problem.
List unavailable.
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Image Unavailable
Color:
-
-
-
- To view this video download Flash Player
-
-
VIDEO -
Nocturnal: A Novel Hardcover – April 3, 2012
Purchase options and add-ons
Homicide detective Bryan Clauser is losing his mind.
How else to explain the dreams he keeps having—dreams that mirror, with impossible accuracy, the gruesome serial murders taking place all over San Francisco? How else to explain the feelings these dreams provoke in him—not disgust, not horror, but excitement?
As Bryan and his longtime partner, Lawrence “Pookie” Chang, investigate the murders, they learn that things are even stranger than they at first seem. For the victims are all enemies of a seemingly ordinary young boy—a boy who is gripped by the same dreams that haunt Bryan. Meanwhile, a shadowy vigilante, seemingly armed with superhuman powers, is out there killing the killers. And Bryan and Pookie’s superiors—from the mayor on down—seem strangely eager to keep the detectives from discovering the truth.
Doubting his own sanity and stripped of his badge, Bryan begins to suspect that he’s stumbled into the crosshairs of a shadow war that has gripped his city for more than a century—a war waged by a race of killers living in San Francisco’s unknown, underground ruins, emerging at night to feed on those who will not be missed.
And as Bryan learns the truth about his own intimate connections to the killings, he discovers that those who matter most to him are in mortal danger…and that he may be the only man gifted—or cursed—with the power to do battle with the nocturnals.
Featuring a dazzlingly plotted mystery and a terrifying descent into a nightmarish underworld—along with some of the most incredible action scenes ever put to paper, and an explosive, gut-wrenching conclusion you won’t soon forget—Nocturnal is the most spectacular outing to date from one of the genre’s brightest stars.
- Print length576 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherCrown
- Publication dateApril 3, 2012
- Dimensions6.4 x 1.81 x 9.5 inches
- ISBN-100307406342
- ISBN-13978-0307406347
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now.
Frequently purchased items with fast delivery
Intercepts: A horror novelPaperbackFREE Shipping on orders over $35 shipped by AmazonGet it as soon as Friday, Aug 8
The Shadows: A NovelPaperbackFREE Shipping on orders over $35 shipped by AmazonGet it as soon as Friday, Aug 8
The Tower: A NovelPaperbackFREE Shipping on orders over $35 shipped by AmazonGet it as soon as Friday, Aug 8
Abandon: A NovelPaperbackFREE Shipping on orders over $35 shipped by AmazonGet it as soon as Friday, Aug 8
Shelter (Book One): A Mickey Bolitar NovelPaperbackFREE Shipping on orders over $35 shipped by AmazonGet it as soon as Friday, Aug 8
Editorial Reviews
Review
"If you're a fan of police procedurals from Michael Connolly, Elmore Leonard or Joseph Wambaugh and you miss the bio-tech science fiction of the late, great Michael Crichton, you'll find "Nocturnal" a treat."--Huntington News
"Sigler is in full control of his talent for sharp characterization and amazing visualization." -- Charlaine Harris, #1 New York Times bestselling author of the Sookie Stackhouse series
"Red meat for readers who wish Harry Potter had swapped his YA credentials for a badge and gun." -- Kirkus Reviews
"Some of the most beautiful carnage we've seen in ages."--io9.com
"A terrifying science thriller that reads like Silence of the Lambs as written by Michael Crichton. Inventive and deeply disturbing." -- Jonathan Maberry, New York Times bestselling author of Assassin's Code
"Will make the end-of-year favorite lists for mysteries, thrillers, science fiction, horror, and yes, just plain old fiction, period. If you are a fan of genre fiction, you have to read Nocturnal."--BookReporter.com
"For fans of realistically presented horror fiction, this is a must-read.”--Booklist
"A hugely enjoyable read by an author who continues to grow."--British Fantasy Society
"One of the most original pieces of genre fiction I have read in a long time. Sigler is like Stephen King with a huge dose of testosterone and adrenaline."--Crimespree Magazine
About the Author
www.scottsigler.com
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
People
Penance
You’re not welcome here, Paul.”
Most places in the world, a statement like that sounded normal. Unfriendly, perhaps, but still common, still acceptable.
Most places, but not at a Catholic church.
“But someone’s following me,” Paul said. “And it’s cold out.” Paul’s eyes flicked left, flicked right, too fast to take anything in. He looked haunted.
That wasn’t Father Esteban Rodriguez’s problem. This man, if he could be called that, would never again be allowed in the Cathedral of St. Mary of the Assumption. Never again.
“You’ve been told,” Esteban said. “You’re not part of this church anymore.”
Paul’s eyes narrowed, cleared. For a moment, Esteban saw a glimmer of the wit that had made Paul so popular, so engaging.
“What about forgiveness?” Paul said. “That’s what we’re all about, forgiveness of our sins. Or are you better than Our Savior?”
Esteban felt rage — a rare emotion — and quickly fought to bring it under control. “I am only a man,” he said. “Perhaps a weak one at that. Maybe the Lord can forgive you your sins, but I can’t. You may not seek shelter here.”
Paul looked down. He shivered. Esteban shivered, too. San Francisco’s evening chill — a wet, clinging thing — rolled through the church door that Esteban blocked with his body.
Paul wore a sagging blue coat that had once probably been puffy and shiny. Maybe it had looked nice on the original owner, whomever that might be, however many years ago that was. Paul’s pants were dirty — not caked with filth, but spotted here and there with finger streaks of food, grease, other things. Years ago, this man had helped care for the homeless; now he looked like one of them.
“I have nowhere to go,” Paul said to the ground.
“That is not the church’s problem. That is not my problem.”
“I’m a human being, Father.”
Esteban shook his head. This disgusting, demonic creature before him thought himself human? “You don’t belong here. You’re not wanted here. This is a sanctuary — one doesn’t let wolves in among the sheep. Why don’t you go somewhere you do belong? If you don’t leave, I’ll call the police.”
Paul looked away, down the street. He seemed to be searching for something, something . . . specific. Something that wasn’t there.
“I told the police,” Paul said. “Told them someone was following me.”
“What did they say?”
Paul looked Esteban in the eyes.
“Pretty much the same thing you did, Father.”
“Whatever a man sows, this he will also reap,” Esteban said. “Hell has a special place for people like you. Leave, now.”
Sadness filled Paul’s eyes. Desperation, despair — perhaps the final understanding that this part of his life was over. Paul looked beyond Esteban, through the door to the church interior. The look of sadness changed to one of longing. Paul had spent many years in this very building.
Those days were gone forever.
Paul turned and walked down the church’s wide steps. Esteban watched him reach the sidewalk of Gough Street, then cross and continue down O’Farrell.
Esteban shut the door.
•••
Paul Maloney hunched his shoulders high, tried to burrow his ears into his coat. He needed a hat. So cold out at night. Wind drove the fog, a fog thick enough that you could see wisps of it at eye level. He walked down O’Farrell Street, home to strip clubs, drug dealers and whores, an asphalt swath of sin and degradation. Part of him knew he belonged here. Another part, an older part, wanted to scream and yell, tell all these sinners where they would go unless they took Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior.
The gall of Father Esteban. Hell has a special place? Maybe for Esteban, maybe for men like him who purported to preach the Word when they didn’t even understand it. God loved Paul Maloney. God loved everyone. Someday, Paul would stand by his side — it would be Esteban who would feel the fires.
Esteban, and the others who had kicked Paul out of the only life he’d ever known.
Paul turned left on Jones Street. Where would he go? He had a constant, churning need for human contact that continued to surprise him. Not the type of contact that had changed his life, just the normal act of a kind word, a conversation. A connection. He’d spent so many years in the church, so many years in front of a steady stream of people. Even during the long periods of study, of contemplation, his isolation was self-imposed; people were always a few rooms away. There was always someone out there to talk to if he so chose.
But for the past couple of years, no one had wanted to talk to Paul Maloney. He had to be careful everywhere he went — some of the sinners around here would pass judgment with their fists and feet.
Two in the morning. People were still on the street, especially in this part of town, but not many. No kids out at this hour. A shame.
Behind him, a noise, the sound of metal scraping lightly against brick.
Paul whirled. No one there.
His heart hammered. He’d turned thinking he would see the man with the shaggy black beard and the green John Deere ball cap. How many times had Paul seen that man in the past week? Four? Maybe five?
Please, Heavenly Father, please don’t let that man be a parent.
The sound came again.
Paul turned so fast he stumbled. What had made that scraping noise? A pipe? Maybe some bag lady pushing a cart with a broken wheel? He looked for the bearded man, but the bearded man wasn’t there.
Paul put his cold hands on his face. He rubbed hard, trying to shake away the fear. How had it come to this? He hadn’t done anything wrong, not really. He just loved so much, and now this was his life: one foot in front of the other, walking through loneliness, until he died.
“I must be strong,” he said. “I will fear no evil, because you are with me, thy —”
A whisper of air behind him, the sound of something heavy falling, the slap of shoe soles against damp concrete.
Paul started to turn, but before he could see what it was, strong hands locked onto his shoulders.
Good Morning, Sunshine
As the sun rose, the shadows crawled along the streets of San Francisco, shrinking away into the buildings that spawned them.
Bryan sat on the ledge of his apartment building’s roof, watching the dawn. Bathrobe, boxers, a cup of coffee, feet dangling six stories above the sidewalk below — a little slice of the good life. He loved his daily rooftop ritual, but normally his work ended with the rising sun.
At dawn, Bryan Clauser usually went to sleep.
He rarely had to work the day shift, a perk of both his seniority and the fact that few other people wanted to pursue murder investigations from eight at night until four in the morning. His beloved night shift would have to wait, however — the Ablamowicz case had stagnated, and Chief Amy Zou had to show some kind of movement or the press would eat her alive.
When a local, loaded businessman is found floating in three separate barrels in the San Francisco Bay, the media wants answers. Zou would masterfully ration pieces of information, steadily feeding the media hounds what they wanted to hear until those hounds gradually lost interest and moved on to the next story.
Zou had a press-conference playbook so predictable that the cops she commanded had labeled the steps — Step I: Gather Information but Don’t Make Assumptions, then Step II: Put Our Senior People on the Case. She had already moved past Step III: Creation of a Multidisciplinary Task Force and sailed headlong into the media-pleasing Step IV: Assign Additional Resources. In this instance, additional resources meant pulling in the night-shift guys. Zou gave orders to Jesse Sharrow, the Homicide department captain, and Sharrow gave orders to Bryan.
So, day shift it was.
Bryan scratched at his short, dark-red beard and his hands came away wet; sometimes he forgot to dry that off. It was getting a little long — not too bad yet, but he’d have to trim it in a day or two or his look would slide from casually cool to newly homeless.
He pulled his black terrycloth robe a little tighter. Chilly up here. His bare feet dangled six stories above Laguna Street. He sipped his coffee and looked north to his “view” of San Francisco Bay. Not much of a view, really: a postage-stamp-size space at the far end of Laguna that showed a strip of blue water, then the dark mass of Angel Island, and beyond that the faraway, starry-light-twinkling of sleepy Tiburon. He couldn’t even see the iconic Golden Gate Bridge from here — too many taller buildings in the way. Views were for the rich.
Cops don’t get rich. Not the clean ones, anyway.
People called his job “homicide inspector,” but that wasn’t how it felt to Bryan. He didn’t inspect, he hunted. He hunted murderers. It was his life, his reason for being. Whatever might be missing from his world, those things faded away when the hunt began. As corny as it sounded, this city was his home and he was one of its protectors.
He’d been born here, but his dad had moved around during Bryan’s childhood and teenage years. Indianapolis for grade school, Atlanta in junior high, Detroit for his freshman and sophomore years. Bryan had never really felt at home anywhere, not until they moved back to the city for his junior year in high school. George Washington High. Good times.
From his robe pocket, his cell phone sounded the tone of an incoming two-way message. He didn’t have to check who it was, because only his partner used that feature. Bryan raised the phone to his ear and thumbed the two-way button, the bee-boop sound chiming when he called out, the opposite boo-beep sound signaling Pookie calling in.
“I’m ready,” Bryan said.
“No, you’re not,” Pookie said. “You’re probably up on your roof drinking coffee.”
“No, I’m not,” Bryan said, then took a sip.
“You probably aren’t even dressed.”
“Yes, I am,” Bryan said.
“You’re an L-L-W-T-L.”
Pookie and his made-up acronyms. Bee-boop: “What the hell is an L-L-W-T-L?”
Boo-beep: “A lying liar who tells lies. It puts on the clothes, or it gets the horn again.”
Bryan drained the coffee mug and set it on the ledge to his left. Three other mugs were already sitting there. He made a mental note to grab them the following night. He usually didn’t bother with the orphaned mugs until there were five or six sitting there like a little ceramic calendar marking the last time he’d bothered to clean up after himself.
He hurried to the fire escape and started down to his apartment. If he wasn’t down on the street by the time Pookie’s Buick rolled up, the man would lean on the horn until Bryan came out. Bryan’s neighbors just loved Pookie Chang.
The damp metal steps felt cold on Bryan’s bare feet. Two flights down he reached the narrow landing just outside his kitchen window and climbed inside.
His kitchen was so small you couldn’t fit two people in there and open the fridge at the same time. Not that he ever had two people in the kitchen. Six months he’d lived in the one-bedroom, and he still hadn’t unpacked most of his boxes.
Bryan dressed quickly. Black socks, black pants and a black T-shirt. His black Bianchi Tuxedo shoulder holster came next, followed by a nylon forearm knife sheath. He scooped up his weapons from his coffee table. Tomahawk tactical fighting knife for the forearm sheath. SOG Twitch XL folding knife, clipped inside the pants to the left of the crotch, hidden from sight but within easy reach. Sig Sauer P226 in the holster. The SFPD issued the .40-caliber version to the entire force. It wouldn’t have been his first choice for a main weapon, but that’s what they gave you and that’s what you carried. The shoulder holster was equipped with two additional magazine pouches and a small handcuff holster. Bryan dutifully filled these as well.
Where a lot of cops carried a backup piece in an ankle holster, Bryan wanted the full effect of an onion field gun — a gun that might be missed by perps should he be taken hostage. His was a tiny Seecamp LWS32, a .32-caliber pistol so small it fit in an imitation wallet and slid into his back left pants pocket. He’d actually been a hostage once, been at the mercy of a perp who’d missed several days of meds. Bryan never wanted to experience anything like that ever again.
He shrugged on a black hoodie and zipped it up, hiding his holster from sight. As he slid past still-packed moving boxes and out his apartment door, he heard the faint, steady sound of a car horn.
What an asshole.
Bryan skipped every other stair as he shot down four flights to the old-school lobby, sneakers slapping against chipped marble floors. Right out front was Pookie’s shit-brown Buick — double-parked, completely blocking a lane.
Passing cars honked, but if Pookie could hear them over his own car’s horn he didn’t pay any attention. After six years together as partners, Bryan knew Pookie’s attitude all too well. Pookie was a cop; what was someone going to do, give him a ticket?
Bryan shot out the door, onto the sidewalk and around the Buick. As usual, a stack of beat-up manila folders filled the passenger’s seat.
Pookie Chang did not believe in technology.
Bryan scooped up the teetering mass, held it in his lap as he sat and shut the door.
“Hey, Pooks.” Bryan reached across and patted Pookie’s belly. “Did the Buddha like his donuts this morning?”
“We can’t all have the metabolism of a hummingbird,” Pookie said as he pulled into traffic on Vallejo Street. “The choo-choo don’t run without some coal in the engine. And Buddha? I could have Internal Affairs bring you up on racial intimidation charges for that. How would you like it if I called you a potato-eating Mick bastard?”
“Clauser is a German name, genius.”
Pookie laughed. “Yeah, all those members of the Master Race have red hair and green eyes just like you.”
Bryan shrugged. “Dark-red. Irish have bright-red. I’m German through and through, going back three generations. Besides, oh sensitive one, I was talking about your big Buddha belly, not your slanty eyes.”
“Slanty eyes? Oh, yeah, that’s so much more politically correct. And I’m not fat. I’m big-boned.”
“I remember when you bought that coat,” Bryan said. “Four years ago. You could button it then — can you button it now?”
Pookie turned south on Van Ness, then cut across two lanes of traffic for no apparent reason. Bryan automatically pressed his feet to the floor and grabbed the door handle. He heard honks and a few screeches as drivers quickly hit their brakes.
“We Chicagoans like to eat,” Pookie said. “You have your tofu and bean sprouts, Cali boy, I’ll keep my brats and bear claws. Besides, the ladies love my belly. That’s why in our cop show, you’re the brooding, misunderstood, tough-guy rebel. I’m the pretty one that gets the babes. In the grander hot-or-not scale? I’m ranked like nine hundred levels above you.”
“That’s a lot of levels.”
Pookie nodded. “Most assuredly.”
“How’s the script coming?”
Pookie’s latest hobby was writing something called a series bible for a police show. He had never acted a day in his life, never been involved in show business, but that didn’t slow him down in the least. He attacked everything in life the same way he attacked a buffet.
Pookie shrugged. “So-so. I thought a cop drama would write itself. Turns out not so much. But don’t worry, I’ll lick it like I licked your mom.”
“Name the show yet?”
“Yeah, listen to this. Midnight Shield. How’s that sit in your mouth?”
“Like bad sushi,” Bryan said. “Midnight Shield? Really?”
“Yeah, ’cause the characters are cops like us, and they work the overnight shift, and —”
“I got the wordplay, Pooks. It’s not that I don’t understand it, it just sucks.”
“The fuck you know about entertainment?”
Pookie swerved sharply to cut off a Prius. He probably did that on purpose — he wasn’t a fan of green energy, green technology, or anything else green that didn’t come complete with the face of a dead president.
“Pooks, anyone ever tell you that you drive like shit?”
“I may have heard that once or twice, Bri-Bri. Although I stand by my theory that feces can neither apply for, nor pass, a driver’s license exam.” He accelerated through a yellow-turning-red. “Don’t worry, God loves me.”
“Your imaginary Sky Daddy is going to keep you safe?”
“Of course,” Pookie said. “I’m one of the chosen ones. If we get into an accident, though, I can’t say what he’ll do for you. You atheists are a bit lower on the miracle depth-chart.”
Pookie unexpectedly slowed and got into the left-turn lane at O’Farrell. They were supposed to start the day at 850 Bryant, police headquarters. For that, they’d stay on Van Ness for another four blocks.
“Where we going?”
“Someone found a body this morning,” Pookie said. “Five thirty-seven Jones Street. Kind of a big deal. Remember the name Paul Maloney?”
“Uh . . . it rings a bell, but I can’t place it.”
“How about Father Paul Maloney?”
“No shit. The child molester?”
Pookie nodded. “Child molester is too nice a word for the guy. Was too nice a word, I mean. He was murdered last night. Call him what he was — a rapist.”
San Francisco hadn’t escaped the wave of accusations that had crashed into the Catholic Church. Maloney first came to attention because he helped cover up early accusations against other priests who were clearly guilty. As more and more adults came forward about what had happened to them as children, the reasons for Maloney’s efforts became clear; he wasn’t just protecting pedophiles, he was one himself. Investigations ensued, producing enough clear-cut evidence that Maloney was finally defrocked.
It didn’t surprise Bryan that someone had killed the man. That didn’t make it right, not by any stretch, but it wasn’t exactly a shocker.
“Wait a minute,” Bryan said. “Time of death?”
“Word is about three or four a.m.”
“So why didn’t we get called in?”
“That’s what I’d like to know,” Pookie said. “We’re temporarily assigned to days and all, but the Maloney murder is just as high-profile as Ablamowicz. The press is going to circle-jerk all over this one.”
“Circle-jerk might not be the best metaphor, considering.”
“Sorry, Mister Sensitive,” Pookie said. “I’ll refrain from sexual innuendo.”
“So who got the case?”
“Verde.”
Bryan nodded. No wonder Pookie wanted to get to the scene. “Polyester Rich, nice. Your favorite guy.”
“I love him so.”
“So we’re driving to the crime scene, to which we’re not assigned, to be a pain in Verde’s ass.”
“You’re very deductive,” Pookie said. “They should make you a cop or something.”
A murder scene, in daylight. That might bring about an uncomfortable situation Bryan desperately wanted to avoid. “Any word on who the ME is for this?”
“Don’t know,” Pookie said. “But you can’t avoid the girl forever, Bryan. She’s a medical examiner, you’re a homicide cop. Those things go together like chocolate and peanut butter. It’s just been dumb luck she hasn’t been at one of our scenes in the past six months. Maybe we’ll luck out and Robin-Robin Bo-Bobbin’s pretty little face will be perched over the dead body.”
Bryan shook his head before he realized he was doing it. “I wouldn’t call that lucky.”
“You should really give her a call.”
“And you should really mind your own business.” He didn’t want to think about Robin Hudson. Time to change the subject. “Verde still working with Bobby Pigeon?”
“Verde and the Birdman. Sadly, that would be a pretty kick-ass name for a cop show. But Verde is just plain ugly, and they don’t make prime-time dramas about stoner cops.”
Pookie turned left on Jones. This part of the city was a mix of buildings, two stories up to five or six, most built in the 1930s or 1940s and with the city’s trademark angled bay windows. Just half a block away, three black-and-whites blocked the area. Pookie reached his hand out the window to place the portable bubble-light on top of the Buick, then pulled a little closer and double-parked.
“This case should be ours,” he said as he got out. “Especially if this is some vigilante bullshit.”
“I know, I know,” Bryan said. “Rule of law and all that.”
Five thirty-seven Jones Street was a two-story building sandwiched between a parking garage and a five-story apartment complex. Half of 537 was a locksmith, the other half a mail services building.
Bryan saw little movement inside the buildings. Up above, however, he saw bits of motion.
Pookie pointed up. “The goddamn roof?”
Bryan nodded. “Curiouser and curiouser.”
A whiff of something strange tickled Bryan’s nose. There, then gone.
They ducked under police tape. The uniforms smiled at Pookie, nodded at Bryan. Pookie waved to each, calling them by name. Bryan knew their faces, but most times names were beyond him.
They entered the building, found the stairs and headed up. Pookie and Bryan stepped onto a flat roof painted in many gloopy layers of light gray. A morning breeze hit them from behind, snapping their clothes just a little. Rich Verde and Bobby “Birdman” Pigeon stood near the body.
Fortunately, the ME was not a hot little Asian woman with her long black hair done up in a tight bun. It was a silver-haired man who moved with the stiff slowness of age. He was squatting on his heels, examining some detail of the deceased.
Light-colored roofs aren’t a good complement to splattered blood. Long brown lines and streaks marked the rough gray paint, creating a Jackson Pollock canvas of death and dirt.
The body lay twisted in a rather unnatural position. The deceased’s legs looked broken — both forelegs and femurs.
“Wow,” Bryan said. “Someone had it in for that guy.”
Pookie put on his aviator sunglasses, then feathered back his heavy black hair. He’d started doing that since he began the series bible — Hollywood wasn’t calling yet, but Pookie Chang would be ready when it did.
“Had it in for a child rapist? Gee, Bri-Bri, I can’t imagine a connection like that. What’s under the tarp, I wonder?” Pookie pointed to the right of the body. A blue, police-issue tarp flapped in the light morning breeze, its corners held down by duct tape. The tarp lay flat against the roof, no room for body-sized lumps — or even severed-limb-sized lumps — beneath it.
Some of the streaks of dried brown blood led under the blue material. The wind caught an edge of the tarp, just a little, lifting it. Like the flash of a fan dancer, Bryan saw a here-then-gone glimpse of what was underneath. Was that a drawing of some kind?
“Hey,” Pookie said, “the ME . . . is that Old Man Metz?”
Bryan nodded as soon as Pookie said the name. “Yeah, that’s the Silver Eagle all right. I haven’t seen him outside of the ME’s office in . . . like five years or so.”
“That pisses me off,” Pookie said. “I mean, even more than before. Did you know Metz was a consultant on that Dirty Harry reboot? Metz knows Hollywood types. And Verde gets to work with him? Verde is a pig-fucker.”
Metz wore a blue uniform jacket — gold braid around the cuffs, two rows of polished brass buttons down the chest. Most of the people from the medical examiner’s office wore windbreaker jackets for pickups, but not Metz. He still sported the same formal attire that had been de rigueur for his department back in the day.
Metz had been the main guy in the ME’s office for thirty years. He was a law enforcement legend. When he walked into a courtroom, lawyers from both sides trembled. Under examination, he often made lawyers look like idiots. He’d written textbooks. He’d been consulted by some of the world’s top crime writers. What Metz didn’t do anymore, though, was go out into the field. The guy was pushing seventy. Even the great ones have limits.
“I’m pissed,” Pookie said. “You ever see Metz in a courtroom? He’s so effing cool. And he’s the only one with a better nickname than you.”
Some people in the department called Bryan the Terminator. “I’m half of Schwarzenegger’s size and I don’t look anything like him.”
“It’s not about looks, dummy. It’s because you kill people,” Pookie said. “That, and you have all the emotional response of a used Duracell. Don’t be so sensitive. People only say it because they respect you.”
Pookie would think that. He saw the world through rose-colored glasses. Pookie didn’t seem to hear the condescending tone with which people used the nickname. Some guys in the department thought Bryan was trigger-happy, a cop who used the gun as a default action instead of as a last resort.
“I’d rather you didn’t use that name, okay?”
Pookie shrugged. “Well, work as long as Metz and get that fabuloso gray do, and maybe they’ll call you the Silver Eagle instead of him. I mean, look at that hair. Home-slice looks like a walking shampoo commercial.”
Metz looked up from the body. He stared at Bryan and Pookie for a second, gave a single nod — chin down, pause, chin up — then went back to work.
“He’s so cool,” Pookie said. “I’d like to be as cool as that when I’m his age, but I think I’ll be busy filling my pants and drooling on myself.”
“Everyone has to have goals, Pooks.”
“True. Oh, that reminds me. Later I’ll tell you about my stock tip. Depends adult undergarments. An aging boomer population makes that stock gold. Brown gold, Bryan.”
“Not now,” Bryan said. “What the hell is that under the tarp?”
Rich Verde looked up from the body and locked eyes with Bryan and Pookie. He shook his head. It didn’t take advanced skills to read his lips: these fucking guys.
Pookie waved, high and happy. “Morning, Rich! Helluva day, ain’t it?”
Rich walked over. Birdman followed, already shaking his head slowly and rolling his eyes.
An odder couple you could not find. Rich Verde was pushing sixty. He’d been busting ass back when Bryan and Pookie were in diapers. Verde still dressed in the cheap polyester suits that had been in style when he’d made his bones thirty years earlier. His pencil mustache just screamed douchebag. Birdman had been promoted from Vice just a few weeks earlier. With his scraggly brown beard, brown knit hat, jeans and tan Carhartt jacket, he looked more like someone who would be the arrest-ee than the arrest-or.
Verde walked right up to Pookie until they almost touched noses.
“Chang,” Verde said. “What the fuck are you two cocksuckers doing here?”
Pookie smiled, reached into his pocket, pulled out a small plastic case and gave it an audible rattle. “Tic Tac?”
Verde’s eyes narrowed.
Pookie leaned to the left, gave an upward nod to Bobby. “Hey there, Birdman.”
“ ’Sup,” Birdman said. He smiled. The morning sun glinted off his gold front-left incisor.
“Bobby, don’t talk to this asshole,” Verde said. “Clauser, Chang, get your asses the fuck outta here.”
Pookie laughed. “You kiss your mother with that mouth?”
“No, but I kissed yours,” Verde said. “With tongue. Far as you know, I’m your daddy.”
“If so, I thank God that chronic halitosis isn’t congenital.” Pookie leaned to the right, looked over Verde’s right shoulder. “I see the Silver Eagle came out for this one. That’s good, Rich — that means everything will be shipshape when Bryan and I take over.”
Verde pointed to the roof door. “Get lost.”
The wind reversed direction, bringing with it that smell — urine.
Urine . . . and something else . . .
“Jeez,” Pookie said. “Speaking of Depends, did someone forget theirs today?”
Birdman nodded. “The perp pissed on him, man. Pretty messed up, huh?”
Verde turned. “Shut the fuck up, Bobby.”
Bobby held up his hands, palms out. He walked back to Metz and Paul Maloney’s body.
“Hey,” Bryan said. “You guys smell that? Not the piss . . . that other smell?”
Pookie and Verde both sniffed, thought about it, then shook their heads.
How could they not smell that?
Pookie offered Verde the Tic Tacs again. Verde just glared.
Pookie shrugged and put them away. “Look, Polyester, do me a favor and be thorough with your report, okay? Once the chief sees the vic’s name, you know she’s going to give the case to us. We’d hate to have to call you to fill in the blanks.”
Verde smiled, shook his head. “Not this time, Chang. Zou put us on this case herself. I wouldn’t rock the boat on this one if I was you.”
Pookie’s ever-present, condescending grin faded a bit. He was eyeing Verde up, seeing if the man was telling the truth.
The roof suddenly shifted; Bryan stumbled left, trying to keep his balance. Pookie caught him, steadied him.
“Bri-Bri, you okay?”
Bryan blinked, rubbed his eyes. “Yeah, just got dizzy for a second.”
Verde sneered. “Take some advice, Terminator — save the bottle for off-duty time.”
Verde turned and walked back to the body.
Bryan stared after the man. “I hate that name.”
“It’s only funny when I use it,” Pookie said. “Bri-Bri, I want to go on record that I am officially unhappy with this staffing decision.”
“Zou’s call,” Bryan said. “You know that means we have to accept it.” Pookie, of course, knew no such thing — he’d be angling for the case nonstop, no matter how exhausting that became to Bryan.
“Come on,” Bryan said. “We have to get to the Hall.”
Pookie adjusted his sunglasses and re-feathered his hair. “Fine by me, Bri-Bri. Can’t really tell which one of them stinks like piss, anyway.”
Bryan went down the steps first, that smell still tickling his nose. He was careful to keep a hand on the rail.
Product details
- Publisher : Crown
- Publication date : April 3, 2012
- Edition : First Edition/First Printing
- Language : English
- Print length : 576 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0307406342
- ISBN-13 : 978-0307406347
- Item Weight : 1.8 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.4 x 1.81 x 9.5 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #616,313 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #7,379 in Horror Literature & Fiction
- #11,733 in Suspense Thrillers
- #27,311 in American Literature (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
Product Videos
About the author

#1 New York Times best-selling author Scott Sigler is the creator of eighteen novels, six novellas, dozens of short stories, and thousands of podcast episodes. He is an inaugural inductee into the Podcasting Hall of Fame.
Scott began his career by narrating his unabridged audiobooks and serializing them in weekly installments. He continues to release free episodes every Sunday. Launched in March of 2005, “Scott Sigler Slices” is the world’s longest-running fiction podcast.
His rabid fans fervently anticipates their weekly story fix, so much so that they’ve dubbed themselves “Sigler Junkies” and have downloaded over 50 million episodes. Subscribe to the free podcast at scottsigler.com/subscribe.
Scott is a co-founder of Empty Set Entertainment, which publishes his Galactic Football League series. A Michigan native, he lives in San Diego, CA with his wife and their wee little Døgs of Døøm.
Products related to this item
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this novel fantastic, praising its exciting fantasy-sci-fi-crime elements and well-developed characters, with one review noting the diverse racial representation among the cast. The writing style receives positive feedback, with one customer highlighting its unique concept and beautiful prose. Customers describe it as an engrossing and entertaining read that keeps them reading with high interest, and they appreciate the fast-paced narrative and good amount of humor throughout the book.
AI Generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers praise the story quality of the book, describing it as fantastic and well told, with one customer noting it's a must-read for horror and cop book enthusiasts.
"...Great book." Read more
"...The book is lengthy but never feels boring. It’s a great read" Read more
"...What a great book! Scott: Churn out some more sci-fi/horror novels please! This book is HIGHLY recommended!" Read more
"Great read. Different from his other books but thoroughly enjoyed it. I have enjoyed Invasion and Contagion and was looking forward to reading this...." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's action story, describing it as an exciting fantasy-sci-fi-crime narrative with great imagination.
"...But...on it's own merit it was action packed and interesting." Read more
"...The characters are great and the science isn't heavy handed and comes off with a taste of possible realism...." Read more
"...Cons: -The story drags on for some time...." Read more
"...Scot Sigler is a terrific, high-speed SF/Horror novel that blends the best of both genres with a police procedural and a decades-old mystery...." Read more
Customers appreciate the character development in the book, with one customer noting the diverse racial representation among the main characters.
"...This is a well done story. The characters have depth and, knowing who they are named after, makes them even more personal to me...." Read more
"Excellent novel. Intriguing (and sometimes creepy) story and plot, deep characters, and catchy dialogue make this book the best Sigler novel to date...." Read more
"...Pros: -Decent character development for certain characters...." Read more
"...The character development, particularly of Bryan and Pookie, is excellent - far better than average even for many very good SF/Horror novels...." Read more
Customers praise the writing style of the book, describing it as well-crafted and easy to follow.
"...If you are a fan of well written, fast paced, what the heck is going to happen next stories with really gun blazing finales I will say, don't wait,..." Read more
"...The characters, by and large, are infinitely more likable and believable as well...." Read more
"...loved, but I have trouble going higher even though it was well-written and a pretty interesting concept...." Read more
"...This book is very well written and keeps your attention...." Read more
Customers find the book entertaining, describing it as engaging and fun to read, with one customer noting it keeps them enthralled to the end.
"...It has lots of action, suspense, thrills and chills that will keep you turning the pages...." Read more
"Nocturnal is a fun and very entertaining novel. It has many unique characters and an action packed story with mutant monsters...." Read more
"Fun, fast-paced read that kept my interest all the way through. Good characters and cool theme." Read more
"Great book, fun read!..." Read more
Customers praise the book's pacing, describing it as fast-paced and well-developed, with one customer noting how it accelerates through all 569 Kindle pages.
"...Fast paced so don't let the 500 plus pages scare you away. Were there flaws? Of course there were. Were there some parts a little too far off?..." Read more
"...seems like an intimidating book to get into, however it is such a fast read and will keep you interested throughout!" Read more
"...The novel starts out pretty fast and then keep accelerating through all 569 Kindle pages, reaching warp speed somewhere around page 350 or 400...." Read more
"Big fan of this writer, & this work met the standard. Super creative, nothing else out there like it. Super fun read." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's humor, particularly the catchy dialogue and banter between characters, with one customer specifically praising the interactions between Inspector Pookie Chang.
"...The characters were so fantastically fun and funny! Especially Pookie!..." Read more
"...(and sometimes creepy) story and plot, deep characters, and catchy dialogue make this book the best Sigler novel to date...." Read more
"...-Good chemistry and humor. Some of the one-liners legit made me laugh out loud. Cons: -The story drags on for some time...." Read more
"...The dialogue is also excellent, and the banter between Bryan and Pookie was amusing and felt real, not forced...." Read more
Customers love Scott Sigler's writing and consider this book a great addition to the Siglerverse.
"...This book is a great addition to the Siglerverse, is a good read, and fits well on my shelve." Read more
"Another great book by Scott Sigler. I started with the infected series and now I am working through all the others...." Read more
"...Pookie is a decent individual, showing the most depth of any member of the cast even if his jokes are hit-or-miss...." Read more
"...One thing I've learned over the years is that you can count on Scott for a helluva story. This one was incredible...." Read more
Reviews with images
Leathal Weapon Meets Hellboy
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews. Please reload the page.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 1, 2012Horror is a genre I love but don't often take a stroll in. A few horror podcasts here, an occasional audio book, but rarely do I pick up a novel or short story. There's one dark force that can draw me in every time his presence goes out in a new beacon of darkness and terror, and that's Scott Sigler. His ability to bring a certain slant of hard sci-fi into the modern world creates a dread terror for the events, places, and creatures that lurk in those pages. His latest official release, Nocturnal, is no exception to this rule.
Bryan Clauser is our point man in the still bloody face mask Nocturnal wears of a buddy cop story. His nightmare journey over the pages that follow peel back this façade and make us yearn for more of the positive outlook of his partner Pookie Chang. Brutal murders, strange occult symbols, terrible nightmares, and a conspiracy that stretches through the decades from the bowels under the city up to the mayor's office lace this book with more excitement at each cut. The cop drama mask fades rips away and horror, monster hunting, and revelations of power and ancestry leaves us with a cold pit in our stomach. The ending leaves us with a sense of things to come and this chapter in the Nocturnal universe comes to a satisfying conclusion while leaving you wanting for another hit.
The book keeps one foot near science and social possible and isn't afraid to take things to certain extremes. There are a number of bizarre examples of biology, yet things aren't taken too far that they would stretch into disbelief. The monsters are terrifying, but they aren't impossible killing machines. They kill for a reason, have a good motivation for what they do (regardless of how misguided), and have more emotions than rage, hate, and murderous intent. By the time you get to the climax, you can believe the culture of the creatures and can see their world is more complex than the butchered bodies they leave behind. How our protagonists and antagonists fit into the culture and history of the conspiracy fits snuggly and awkwardly comfortable.
Regardless of setting or plot characters are king, and Nocturnal provides ample people for us to fall in love with and hate. Bryan "The Terminator" Clauser is an emotional wall at times, a brutal killer at other points, and starts off seemed like a two dimensional wall until you crack the surface. Once his emotional walls are torn down brick by brick he reveals just how strong and deep his emotions go, without forgetting that he is still The Terminator. He doesn't flip flop to a completely different beings even though his barriers are exposed. Partner Pookie and ex-girlfriend Robin serve as great supporting characters, with complex personalities and wants. Their lives, while related to Bryan, don't completely orbit just him. The world doesn't stop at the behest of the protagonist and I love it. The same can be said for one of our antagonist, Rex. He starts off as a weak and abused loner. The sudden gift of incredible power and authority twists him along a logical path he's always had inside. He just needed the right path to walk down.
Nocturnal has quickly shot up to my favorite published Sigler book so far. I've loved his other works but the dark urban sci-fi of the book becomes mixed with the creepy culture of the children make me want so much more from this setting. There are still things left unanswered from the book, and a large number of deaths to avenge by the time the dust settles. There's also a back story to the beasts, who has fought them, and what role certain people played in the conspiracy to deal with.
I recommend the book to anyone wanting the fun of a good horror/adventuresque combo breaker. The characters are great and the science isn't heavy handed and comes off with a taste of possible realism. The mystery itself is revealed rather quickly but you're left satisfied as the plot deals with the revelations. The final scenes are just as Scott indicates in his interviews of the book: a very Hollywood action packed spectacle of fire, explosions, gunfire, monsters, and questions of who will and will not die. It's worth the great story to get to that point, and you'll keep your eyes peeled to the page for the back quarter of the book, resistant to talk to family and friends, work, or another else that could risk diminishing the value of finishing this book.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 9, 2020This is my second book by Scott Sigler. My first was EarthCore, which was amazing. I was hoping this one would be just as good, but well...
Pros:
-Decent character development for certain characters. Author does a good job in making us hate a character one chapter, and feel bad for him or her several chapters later, and vice versa.
-This kinda goes along with the previous point, but I like how the author devotes time diving into the character's psyche, so we understand why they do what they do, and feel what they feel.
-Good chemistry and humor. Some of the one-liners legit made me laugh out loud.
Cons:
-The story drags on for some time. There definitely are many moments that keep you invested in the story, but you could probably shave off 50+ pages of (secondary) villains going about their day, and not miss much.
-Related to the first con: many characters are introduced in the first few chapters, but more than half of them are rarely mentioned later on. Makes it hard to build a connection when they are involved in anything.
-The post-climax wraps up pretty abruptly, not giving us much time or info as to what's coming. I'm not sure if this book has a sequel, but it seems set up for one the way it ends.
As others have said, this seems to be a blend of cop/detective drama, and monster fantasy. I personally liked the former more than the latter, but that's just me. All in all, it's worth checking out if either genre appeals to you.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 6, 2013"Nocturnal" by Scot Sigler is a terrific, high-speed SF/Horror novel that blends the best of both genres with a police procedural and a decades-old mystery. The principal protagonist, Bryan Clauser, is an experienced SF homicide detective nicknamed "the Terminator" for his 5 righteous kills in the line of duty. Bryan is the strong, (mostly) silent type whose life basically is the job, since his breakup 6 months ago from his live-in lover, SF assistant coroner, Robin. Bryan's long-time partner Pookie Chang is a pudgy, wisecracking Asian-American who considers himself a real ladies man. Bryan begins having dreams of a series of horrible murders, seen through the eyes of the murderer, only the crimes turn out to be real, and somehow connected to the trials and tribulations of a 13 year old kid who is being bullied at school. Bryan and Pookie start to investigate, and are promptly and inexplicably reassigned by the Chief of Police and the cases handed over to another team of homicide detectives.
The novel starts out pretty fast and then keep accelerating through all 569 Kindle pages, reaching warp speed somewhere around page 350 or 400. There are hints to what is happening scattered throughout the first few hundred pages, but even after the main McGuffin is revealed there are lots more twists and turns through the end. For the first half of the novel, who the good guys and who the bad guys really are is tough to figure out, and I'll predict that you (like me) might be wrong once or twice.
Sigler is an accomplished writer of SF, and his two alien invasion stores, "Infected" and "Contagious" were big hits a few years ago. I liked both of them, but I liked Nocturnal even more. There is excellent verisimilitude in the SF parts of the novel which I, as a neuroscientist, always appreciate (nothing turns me off a book faster than bad science in the SF). The dialogue is also excellent, and the banter between Bryan and Pookie was amusing and felt real, not forced. Sigler has a pretty good sense of humor, with one character nicknamed Black Mr. Burns (from the Simpsons) and another, Mr. Biz-Nass, a fortune teller with Tourette's syndrome who has lost his larynx to cancer and has to speak with a throat vibrator. The character development, particularly of Bryan and Pookie, is excellent - far better than average even for many very good SF/Horror novels.
The suspense is high, and there are several scenes of gory horror worthy of the younger Stephen King or Clive Barker. And although there are some superficial similarities between Nocturnal and Barker's novella, "Cabal" (turned into the movie, "Nightbreed"), Nocturnal is in reality very different (but you might want to take a look at Cabal, found in Barker's collection, "Books of Blood"), and will be enjoyed by most fans of horror and/or SF.
Highly Recommended.
J.M. Tepper
- Reviewed in the United States on June 30, 2025Big fan of this writer, & this work met the standard. Super creative, nothing else out there like it. Super fun read.
Top reviews from other countries
savagegardenerReviewed in the United Kingdom on September 9, 20245.0 out of 5 stars Great Read.
As a new author to me, I have enjoyed this book very much and am pleased to have discovered him. After this , I will certainly be purchasing more. The writing and storyline are smooth and easy, and you quickly find yourself immersed with the characters and world he creates. Although the existence of the monsters is far fetched of course, the clever way of linking it with genetics makes it easy to suspend your disbelief and just enjoy the tale. The book certainly isn't short, but doesn't seem overlong due to the quality of the storytelling, and certainly offers good value for money. Highly recommended.
-
Desmond ChildReviewed in Germany on December 3, 20125.0 out of 5 stars Super spannend!
Absoluter "Page Turner". Die Geschichte beginnt als normaler Krmi im Buddy-Stil und entwickelt sich dann immer mehr in Richtung Horror und Fantasy. Auch mit weniger guten Englisch-Kenntnissen gut lesbar.
Kevin PearceReviewed in Canada on June 6, 20195.0 out of 5 stars Spellbinding
Another great book by Scott. Well done plot and the twists and turns keep you reading well into the night.
MpReviewed in Canada on August 6, 20164.0 out of 5 stars Monsters under the City
Really violent, and not the book you want to read yourself to sleep with, but a good read all the same. Some of the writing is a little annoying, a little film noire wannabe, but if you get past it, it's quite a story.
poppyffxReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 28, 20214.0 out of 5 stars Another brilliant and original book by Mr Sigler!
This is the 7th Scott sigler book ive read since April and he's become one of my favourites of all time. This book feels like its written by a different author as is like a world class detective novel with horror thrown in and shows the skill of the author. I feel in love with pookie and bryan and hope to god theres another book on the way. Just like the infected and alive trilogies this would make an amazing film -right now to buy the 8th


