The Skin Collector (A Lincoln Rhyme Novel, 12) by Jeffery Deaver - Hardcover
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The Skin Collector (A Lincoln Rhyme Novel, 12)Hardcover

by

Jeffery Deaver

(Author)

4.3

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8,583 ratings


In his classic thriller The Bone Collector, Jeffery Deaver introduced readers to Lincoln Rhyme-the nation's most renowned investigator and forensic detective.

Now, a new killer is on the loose: a criminal inspired by the Bone Collector. And Rhyme must untangle the twisted web of clues before the killer targets more victims-or Rhyme himself.

The killer's methods are terrifying. He stalks the basements and underground passageways of New York City. He tattoos his victims' flesh with cryptic messages, using a tattoo gun loaded with poison, resulting in an agonizing, painful death.

When a connection is made to the Bone Collector-the serial killer who terrorized New York more than a decade ago-Lincoln Rhyme and Amelia Sachs are immediately drawn into the case.

Rhyme, Sachs, and the NYPD must race against time to answer the many questions the investigation uncovers: Whom will the killer attack next? What is the message behind the victims' tattoos? Does the killer's own inking--a fanged centipede sporting a woman's face--hold any significance? And what is his ultimate mission?

As time runs out, Rhyme discovers that the past has returned to haunt him in the most troubling way imaginable...

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ISBN-10

1455517127

ISBN-13

978-1455517121

Print length

464 pages

Language

English

Publisher

Grand Central Publishing

Publication date

April 20, 2015

Dimensions

5.3 x 1.5 x 8 inches

Item weight

12.5 ounces


Product details

ASIN :

B00EXTUW5W

File size :

5751 KB

Text-to-speech :

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Screen reader :

Supported

Enhanced typesetting :

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Editorial reviews

"Outstanding...the endgame remains in doubt to the end. Deaver proves himself a grandmaster of the genre as each surprise leads to an even bigger surprise, like a series of reverse Russian nesting dolls."―Publishers Weekly -- Starred Review

"This is Deaver at his very best and not to be missed by any thriller fan."―Publishers Weekly (starred review) on The Kill Room - A "Best Summer Book of 2013"

"Chillingly effective...Jeffery Deaver's quadriplegic detective has never been better...Equal parts Marathon Man and top-notch political thriller, this is Deaver at the top of his game. Rhyme remains the most original hero in thriller fiction today who may have met his match in Swann. Not to be missed."―Providence Sunday Journal on The Kill Room

"Jeffery Deaver has written an ace thriller to keep readers guessing and gasping with his latest Lincoln Rhyme thriller, The Kill Room. A master magician with words, Deaver misdirects with one tale while what's really going on is just off the reader's radar...The numerous twists and turns in The Kill Room are so fast and furious that by the novel's end, the reader will be dizzy - and clamoring for more."―Associated Press

"Not even the brilliant Rhyme can foresee the shocking twists the case will take in this electrically charged thriller."―Publishers Weekly, (Starred Review) on The Burning Wire

"A taut psychological thriller from a masterful crime writer, proving Deaver just gets better with each new novel."―June 2010 Indie Next List Great Reads list on The Burning Wire

"This eighth novel featuring quadriplegic forensic expert Lincoln Rhyme is one of Deaver's best...Deaver has outdone himself."―The Globe and Mail on The Broken Window

"Deaver's scarily believable depiction of identity theft in a total-surveillance society stokes our paranoia. A -."―Entertainment Weekly on The Broken Window

"One of the most unnerving of Deaver's eight novels featuring his quadriplegic forensic detective, Lincoln Rhyme."―New York Times on The Broken Window

"Rhyme is one of the mystery genre's most interesting and out-of-the-ordinary series leads...As always, Deaver's dialogue is exceptionally realistic, and his plotting is devilishly intricate. Recommended for fans of the Rhyme novels (naturally) and readers who like their thrillers laced with wit and sharp characterizations."―Booklist on The Broken Window

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Sample

CHAPTER 1

NOON

The basement.

She had to go to the basement.

Chloe hated it down there. But they’d sold out of sizes ten and twelve Rue du Cannes—the tacky little floral number with scalloped hemline and plunging front—and she needed to replenish the racks, fill ’em up for the grazers. Chloe was an actress, not a retail fashion expert, and new to the store. So she hadn’t fathomed why, in a November impersonating January, these particular dresses were selling out. Until her boss explained that, even though the store was in alternative SoHo in Manhattan, the ZIP codes of the purchasers situated them in Jersey, Westchester and Long Island.

“And?”

“Cruises, Chloe. Cruises.”

“Ah.”

Chloe Moore walked into the back of the store. Here the shop was the opposite of the sales floor and about as chic as a storage unit. She found the key among those dangling from her wrist and unlocked the basement door. She flicked on the lights and studied the unsteady stairs.

A sigh and she started down. The door, on a spring, swung shut behind her. Not a small woman, Chloe took the steps carefully. She was also on Vera Wang knock-offs. Pseudo-designer heels and hundred-year-old architecture can be a dangerous combination.

The basement.

Hated it.

Not that she worried about intruders. There was only one door in and out—the one she’d just come through. But the place was moldy, damp, cold… and booby-trapped with cobwebs.

Which meant sly, predatory spiders.

And Chloe knew she’d need a dog roller to remove the dust from the dark-green skirt and black blouse (Le Bordeaux and La Seine).

She stepped onto the uneven, cracked concrete floor, moving to the left to avoid a big web. But another one got her; a long clinging strand clutched her face, tickling. After a comic dance of trying to brush the damn thing off and not fall over, she continued her search. Five minutes later she found the shipments of Rue du Cannes, which may have looked French and sounded French but came in boxes printed largely with Chinese characters.

As she tugged the cartons off the shelf Chloe heard a scrape.

She froze. Tilted her head.

The sound didn’t repeat. But then she was aware of another noise.

Drip, drip, drip.

Was there a leak?

Chloe came down here often, if reluctantly, and she’d never heard water. She stacked the faux French garments near the stairs and turned to investigate. Most of the inventory was on shelves but some cartons rested on the floor. A leak could be disastrous. And while, yes, Chloe was eventually headed for Broadway she nonetheless needed to keep her job here at Chez Nord for the foreseeable future. Stopping a leak before it ruined ten thousand dollars’ worth of overpriced clothes might go a long way in keeping those paychecks dribbling into Chase.

She walked to the back of the cellar, determined to find the leak, though also on serious spider alert.

The dripping grew louder as she moved toward the rear of the room, even murkier than the front, near the stairs.

Chloe stepped behind a shelf, containing a huge supply of blouses so ugly even her mother wouldn’t wear them—a major order by a buyer who, Chloe believed, had made the purchase because he knew he was going to be sacked.

Drip, drip…

Squinting.

Odd. What was that? In the far wall an access door was open. The sound of water was coming from there. The door, painted gray like the walls, was about three feet by four.

What did it lead to? Was there a sub-basement? She’d never seen the doorway but then she didn’t believe she’d ever glanced at the wall behind the last shelf. There was no reason to.

And why was it open? The city was always doing construction work, especially in the older parts, such as here, SoHo. But nobody had talked to the clerks—her, at least—about a repair beneath the building.

Maybe that weird Polish or Rumanian or Russian janitor was doing some repairs. But, no, couldn’t be. The manager didn’t trust him; he didn’t have keys to the basement door.

Okay, the creep factor was rising.

Don’t bother figuring it out. Tell Marge about the drip. Tell her about the open doorway. Get Vlad or Mikhail or whoever he is down here and let him earn his salary.

Then another scrape. This time it seemed to be a foot shifting on gritty concrete.

Fuck. That’s it. Get. Out.

But before she got out, before she even spun an eighth turn away, he was on her from behind, slamming her head into the wall. He pressed a cloth over her mouth to gag her. She nearly fainted from the shock. A burst of pain blossomed in her neck.

Chloe turned fast to face him.

God, God…

She nearly puked, seeing the yellowish latex full-head mask, with slots for eyes and mouth and ears, tight and distorting the flesh underneath, as if his face had melted. He was in worker’s coveralls, some logo on them she couldn’t read.

Crying, shaking her head, she was pleading through the gag, screaming through the gag, which he kept pressed firmly in place with a hand in a glove as tight and sickly yellow as the mask.

“Listen to me, please! Don’t do this! You don’t understand! Listen, listen…” But the words were just random sounds through the cloth.

Thinking: Why didn’t I chock the door open? I thought about it… Furious with herself.

His calm eyes looked her over—but not her breasts or lips or hips or legs. Just the skin of her bare arms, her throat, her neck—where he focused intently on a small blue tattoo of a tulip.

“Not bad, not good,” he whispered.

She was whimpering, shivering, moaning. “What, what, what do you want?”

But why did she even ask? She knew. Of course she knew.

And, with that thought, Chloe controlled the fear. She tightened her heart.

Okay, asshole, wanna play? You’ll pay.

She went limp. His eyes, surrounded by yellow latex like sickly skin, seemed confused. The attacker, apparently not expecting her collapse, adjusted his grip to keep her from falling.

As soon as she felt his hands slacken Chloe lunged forward and grabbed the collar of his coveralls. The zipper popped and cloth tore—both the outer garment and whatever was under it.

Her grip and the blows aimed at his chest and face were fierce. She pumped her knee upward toward his groin. Again and once more.

But she didn’t connect. Her aim was off. It seemed such an easy target but she was suddenly uncoordinated, dizzy. He was cutting off her air with the gag—that was it maybe. Or the aftermath of the shock.

Keep going, she raged. Don’t stop. He’s scared. You can see it. Fucking coward…

And tried to hit him again, claw at his flesh, but she now found her energy fading fast. Her hands tapped uselessly against him. Her head lolled and, looking down, she noticed that his sleeve had ridden up. Chloe caught sight of a weird tattoo, in red, some insect, dozens of little insect legs, insect fangs but human eyes. And then she focused on the floor of the cellar. A glint from the hypodermic syringe. That was the source of the pain in her neck—and of her fleeing strength. He’d injected her with something.

Whatever the drug, it was taking effect in a big way. She was growing exhausted. Her mind tumbled, as if dipping into and out of a dream, and for some reason she found herself obsessing over the cheap perfume Chez Nord sold by the checkout counter.

Who’d buy that crap? Why didn’t—?

What am I doing? she thought as clarity returned. Fight! Fight the son of a bitch!

But her hands were at her sides now, completely still, and her head heavy as stone.

She was sitting on the floor and then the room tilted and began to move. He was dragging her toward the access door.

No, not there, please!

Listen to me! I can explain why you shouldn’t do this. Don’t take me there! Listen!

Here in the cellar proper, at least there was still some hope that Marge would look down the stairs and see them both and she’d scream and he’d scramble off on his insect legs. But once Chloe was deep underground in his bug nest, it would be too late. The room was growing dark but an odd kind of dark, as if the ceiling bulbs, which were still on, were not emitting light but drawing in rays and extinguishing them.

Fight!

But she couldn’t.

Closer to the black abyss.

Drip, drip, drip…

Scream!

She did.

But no sound came from her mouth beyond a hiss, a cricket click, a beetle hum.

Then he was easing her through the door into Wonderland, on the other side. Like that movie. Or cartoon. Or whatever.

She saw a small utility room below.

Chloe believed she was falling, over and over, and a moment later she was on the floor, the ground, the dirt, trying to breathe, the air kicked out of her lungs from the impact. But no pain, no pain at all. The sound of dripping water was more pronounced and she saw a trickle down the far wall, made of old stone and laced with pipes and wires, rusty and frayed and rotting.

Drip, drip…

A trickle of insect venom, of shiny clear insect blood.

Thinking, Alice, I’m Alice. Down the rabbit hole. The hookah-smoking caterpillar, the March Hare, the Red Queen, the red insect on his arm.

She never liked that goddamn story!

Chloe gave up on screaming. She wanted only to crawl away, to cry and huddle, to be left alone. But she couldn’t move. She lay on her back, staring up at the faint light from the basement of the store that she hated working in, the store that she wanted with all her soul to be back inside right now, standing on sore feet and nodding with fake enthusiasm.

No, no, it makes you look sooo thin. Really…

Then the light grew dimmer yet as her attacker, the yellow-faced insect, climbed into the hole, pulled the access door shut behind him, and came down the short ladder to where she lay. A moment later a piercing light filled the tunnel; he’d pulled a miner’s lamp onto his forehead, clicked it on. The white beam blinded and she screamed, or didn’t scream, at the piercing brilliance.

Which suddenly faded to complete darkness.

She awoke a few seconds or minutes or a year later.

Chloe was someplace else now, not the utility room, but in a larger room, no, a tunnel. Hard to see, since the only illumination was a weak light above her and the focused beam from the masked insect man’s forehead. It blinded her every time he looked at her face. She was on her back again, staring upward, and he was kneeling over her.

But what she’d been expecting, dreading, wasn’t happening. In a way, though, this was worse because that—ripping her clothes off and then what would follow—would at least have been understandable. It would have fallen into a known category of horror.

This was different.

Yes, her blouse was tugged up but only slightly, exposing her belly from navel to the bottom of her bra, which was still chastely in place. Her skirt was tucked tight around her thighs, almost as if he didn’t want there to be any suggestion of impropriety.

Leaning forward, hunched, intent, he was staring with those calm eyes of his, those insect eyes, at her smooth, white belly skin the way somebody would look over a canvas at MoMA: head tilted, getting the right angle to appreciate Jackson Pollock’s spatter, Magritte’s green apple.

He then slowly extended his index finger and stroked her flesh. His yellow finger. He splayed his palm and brushed back and forth. He pinched and raised peaks of skin between his thumb and forefinger. He let go and watched the mounds flatten back.

His insect mouth curved into a faint smile.

She thought he said, “Very nice.” Or maybe that was the smoke-ring caterpillar talking or the bug on his arm.

She heard a faint hum of vibration and he looked at his watch. Another hum, from elsewhere. Then he glanced at her face and saw her eyes. He seemed surprised, maybe, that she was awake. Turning, he tugged into view a backpack and removed from it a filled hypodermic syringe. He stabbed her again, this time in a vein in her arm.

The warmth flowed, the fear lessened. As darkness trickled around her, sounds vanishing, she saw his yellow fingers, his caterpillar fingers, his insect claws, reach into the backpack once more and carefully remove a small box. He set it beside her exposed skin with the same reverence she remembered her priest displaying as he’d placed the silver vessel holding the blood of Christ on the altar last Sunday during Holy Communion.

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About the authors

Jeffery Deaver

Jeffery Deaver

Jeffery Deaver is an international number-one bestselling author. His novels have appeared on bestseller lists around the world. His books are sold in 150 countries and translated into over twenty-five languages. He has served two terms as president of Mystery Writers of America, and was recently named a Grand Master of MWA, whose ranks include Agatha Christie, Ellery Queen, Mary Higgins Clark and Walter Mosely.

The author of over forty novels, three collections of short stories and a nonfiction law book, and a lyricist of a country-western album, he’s received or been shortlisted for dozens of awards. His "The Bodies Left Behind" was named Novel of the Year by the International Thriller Writers association, and his Lincoln Rhyme thriller "The Broken Window" and a stand-alone, "Edge," were also nominated for that prize. "The Garden of Beasts" won the Steel Dagger from the Crime Writers Association in England. He’s also been nominated for eight Edgar Awards by the MWA.

Deaver has been honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award by the Bouchercon World Mystery Convention, the Strand Magazine’s Lifetime Achievement Award and the Raymond Chandler Lifetime Achievement Award in Italy.

His book "A Maiden’s Grave" was made into an HBO movie starring James Garner and Marlee Matlin, and his novel "The Bone Collector" was a feature release from Universal Pictures, starring Denzel Washington and Angelina Jolie. Lifetime aired an adaptation of his "The Devil’s Teardrop." NBC television recently aired the nine-episode prime-time series, "Lincoln Rhyme: Hunt for the Bone Collector."

You can find out more about Jeffery on his website www.jefferydeaver.com, Facebook page facebook.com/JefferyDeaver, and follow him on Twitter @JefferyDeaver.

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Reviews

Customer reviews

4.3 out of 5

8,583 global ratings

Sunshine

Sunshine

5

Another Hit

Reviewed in the United States on December 29, 2023

Verified Purchase

If you love a good thriller and mystery, I would definitely recommend the Lincoln Rhymes series. The Skin Collector was another amazing book that I stayed up later to just read more. I do not want to spoil anything. All I’ll say, is this book will be especially enjoyable for people who’ve read the books in order.

I am going to buy the next book of the series now!

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Island River Scribe

Island River Scribe

5

The Modification Commandments

Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2016

Verified Purchase

In Jeffery Deaver’s 11th entry in the Lincoln Rhyme series, he is still the literary master of the plot twist. Just accept the fact that you will not draw an easy breath from the end of the first chapter until the last page of the book. As the cliché goes, you are constantly waiting for the other shoe to drop, and Deaver has a full closet of them to utilize this go round.

As the book promo states, someone is killing New Yorkers by tattooing them with poison. And it’s not that the ink contains poison, causing a get-sick-and-wither-away scenario similar to the Victorian arsenic-in-the-soup method of solving domestic strife. Oh, no! There is no ink, only poison. Heavily concentrated plant-based poisons are used to end the victims’ lives in a short and horrifically agonizing way. But the poison might as well have been ink, because the inflamed flesh is still an impeccable artistic design, complete with cryptic message.

We witness the killer destroy his first victim in the first chapter. We learn his name in the first words of the second chapter. And we spend a great many chapters watching and listening to this man. In fact, we are inside Billy Haven’s head far more in this book than we have ever been allowed inside one of Deaver’s villains before.

At first, the novel takes much the same tack as previous Lincoln Rhyme novels. Rhyme is still all about the physical evidence – the facts, ma’am, nothing but the facts – and is his usual blunt, gruff, sarcastic self. Sachs is still walking the grid, getting the evidence and facts for Rhyme and trying to obtain a psychological profile and accompanying motive to go with the facts.

And, as usual, we have a secondary case to worry with. The Watchmaker, a villain who has starred in several previous novels and is one of Rhyme’s most respected adversaries, has died, unexpectedly, in prison from a heart attack.

Then, as you get a bit further into the story, Deaver’s style changes. Certain words here and certain actions there make you begin to shake your head and squint your eyes. Events that would usually, in previous novels, receive an explanation in a subsequent chapter are left dangling. Certain scenes just feel wrong, not awkward or poorly written but incomplete.

Only little things seem to receive this treatment, but it happens often enough to have a cumulative effect on the reader’s concept of reality. You find yourself going back and re-reading paragraphs because “Do what!” just keeps rolling off your tongue.

Before too long you begin to wonder whether these are writing quirks or actual clues for the reader, clues to which Rhyme and Sachs have no access. And knowing how much Deaver likes to twist the reader in the wind, particularly at the ends of chapters, the decision to treat them as “hidden” clues begins to feel right.

In the end, with Deaver’s writing style, the best you can do is hang on with all your fingers and toes and lean into the curves. Just accept the fact that you will feel off balance most of the time.

And read slowly for maximum exposure to those clues. The last two chapters are worth it.

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3 people found this helpful

Laura B.

Laura B.

5

Just One More Fabulous Jeffery Deaver Mystery!

Reviewed in the United States on July 12, 2015

Verified Purchase

If you've ever read a Jeffery Deaver novel in the past, then you already know that no matter the story, it's going to be solid, hard to put down, and filled with unexpected twists and turns. The Skin Collector most assuredly carries all of those attributes.

You shouldn't be surprised. After all, this is Deaver's 11th Lincoln Rhyme novel. Presumably you've read at least some of the previous Lincoln Rhyme mysteries and already know Rhyme is a brilliant criminalist locked into a body of a quadriplegic, with almost nothing intact but his brilliant mind. But he's molded his apartment environment to work for him, and rarely needs to leave. Every bit of lab equipment he owns rivals or exceeds the best out there. For Rhyme, though, those are mere tools for a long-term passion: Figuring out puzzles that come from murders, often of the most heinous type.

In The Skin Collector, there are clear parallels to Deaver's earlier novel, The Bone Collector. For me, this wasn't bothersome, but from reading other reviews it's clear other readers were bothered, or even annoyed. However, The Skin Collector is, after all, part of a series. (It's also not the only series that Deaver has in a long career with more than 30 books, most if not all published in a variety of languages because they're so popular.)

But I digress. The Bad Guy in the story is a tattoo artist and a perfectionist. He's also very smart — and indeed, thrilled to be the subject of Rhyme's investigation. That happens quickly because the Bad Guy essentially tattoos people to an early grave. You'll get no spoilers from me. Read the story to see what I'm talking about. Just know that the Bad Guy's own understanding of forensics makes him a worthy rival for Lincoln Rhyme.

Of course, given that Deaver made Rhyme a quadriplegic, it only makes sense that secondary characters must be compelling and offer opportunities for plenty of action in the story. The best? Amelia Sachs, who drives a muscle car and manages to push aside any fear she has to go after the Bad Guy. She's gutsy, shrewd and coincidentally, more than a mere colleague to Rhyme. The point? Without Sachs, it's unlikely even Deaver could pen a mystery on the level he does because of the physical limitations his main character has.

I suggest that before you read The Skin Collector, you read some of the other Lincoln Rhyme novels, or at least, yes, The Bone Collector. It's not critical, but it might push you from a four-star review to a five.

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5 people found this helpful

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