Number One bestseller Jeffery Deaver returns with a new Kathryn Dance thriller guest starring Lincoln Rhyme.
Kayleigh Towne is a beautiful and successful singer-songwriter, and Edwin Sharp is her biggest fan. When she replies to one of his fan letters with 'XO', Edwin is convinced she loves him, and that her latest hit song 'Your Shadow' was written for him. Nothing Kayleigh or her lawyers can say persuades him otherwise.
Then the singer gets an anonymous phone call; it's the first verse of 'Your Shadow' playing. Soon after, one of the crew is horribly murdered. Kayleigh's friend Kathryn Dance, a special agent with the California Bureau of Investigation, knows that stalking crimes are not one-off occurrences, and, sure enough, more verses of the song are played as warnings of death to follow. With a little help from forensic criminalist Lincolyn Rhyme, Dance must use her kinesic and investigative skills in an attempt to find the killer before more people die.
About the Author
Jeffery Deaver is the creator of Lincoln Rhyme, and the award-winning author of 29 internationally bestselling thrillers, including the new James Bond novel Carte Blanche. He lives in North Carolina.
Industry Reviews
Devious, diabolical and devilish . . . It's Dance's toughest case, and one of Deaver's best books. -- New York Times
With a game of cat and mouse that is full of twists and turns, expect family and friends to queue up to borrow this one -- Candis
Excellent . . . plenty of surprises and red herrings -- Publishers Weekly, starred review
Written with Deaver's usual keen eye for dialogue and character and featuring his customary right-angle plot twists, the novel will be a sure-fire hit . . . This may be the most compelling of the Dance books. -- Booklist
The most creative, skilled and intriguing thriller writer in the world . . . [Deaver] has produced a stunning series of bestsellers with unique characterisation, intelligent characters, beguiling plots and double-barrelled and sometimes triple-barrelled solutions. -- Daily Telegraph