River - Hardcover

Thorp, Roderick

  • 3.46 out of 5 stars
    91 ratings by Goodreads
 
9780449907047: River

Synopsis

It is America's most notorious, unsolved, serial murder case: the Green River Killer slaughtered at least fifty women in the Seattle-Portland area during the 1980s and was never brought to justice. Now, in this gripping novel, the bestselling author of The Detective and Diehard presents his own horrifying portrayal of the Green River killings. River unmasks the Green River Killer and reveals why he was never caught--a story no true crime account has ever been able to tell.
Phil Boudreau is a veteran detective with the Seattle vice squad. Tough, smart, impatient, he appreciates beautiful women and genuinely cares for the throwaway kids on his beat. Boudreau knows from the first that the murderer is cunning and brilliant. Then the details of one of the killings burn a name into Boudreau's mind: Garrett Richard Lockman.
Sent to jail by Boudreau years before, Garrett Lockman is society's worst nightmare: a shrewd, manipulative career criminal driven by an unstoppable will and insatiable sexual needs. When Boudreau learns that Lockman had escaped from prison before the first killing, the detective conceives an obsession of his own: prove that Lockman is the perpetrator of the most sadistic crimes one human being can commit against another.
But Boudreau is powerless to act--through Lockman's machinations, he, himself has become a suspect. As Boudreau stalks Lockman for eight grueling years, he realizes to his horror, that the police department has become an accomplice in the unspeakable crimes. River reaches its shattering climax in an agonizing power struggle between psychopath and cop--a contest that Boudreau can win only by dispensing justice as cruel as Lockman's crimes.
No other writer has probed the evil depths of a serial killer's mind as unflinchingly as Rod Thorp does in River. No other crime writer has rivaled Thorp's mastery of the paralyzing labyrinth of the criminal justice system. River is a brilliant portrait of heinous criminality that starts with the reported facts and explodes into fiction of unsurpassed intensity. Relentless in its suspense, chilling in the dark truth it explores, River is an overwhelming journey into the nightmare of evil that surrounds us all.
"River is the perfect serial killer novel. Horrifying, dark, procedurally fascinating, unrelenting in its suspense."
--Jonathan Kellerman

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From the Inside Flap

a's most notorious, unsolved, serial murder case: the Green River Killer slaughtered at least fifty women in the Seattle-Portland area during the 1980s and was never brought to justice. Now, in this gripping novel, the bestselling author of The Detective and Diehard presents his own horrifying portrayal of the Green River killings. River unmasks the Green River Killer and reveals why he was never caught--a story no true crime account has ever been able to tell. <br>Phil Boudreau is a veteran detective with the Seattle vice squad. Tough, smart, impatient, he appreciates beautiful women and genuinely cares for the throwaway kids on his beat. Boudreau knows from the first that the murderer is cunning and brilliant. Then the details of one of the killings burn a name into Boudreau's mind: Garrett Richard Lockman. <br>Sent to jail by Boudreau years before, Garrett Lockman is society's worst nightmare: a shrewd, manipulative career criminal driven by an unstoppable will and insatiable sexual needs. Wh

Reviews

From meager threads of fact snipped from Seattle's still unresolved Green River serial killings, Thorp (Rainbow Drive; Die Hard) weaves a spellbinding tapestry depicting a charming, intelligent monster and the cop who hunts him down. Seattle vice detective Philippe Boudreau gets no respect and a lot of grief from self-promoting Captain Ron Beale when, in 1982, Boudreau identifies a Green River floater by an intimate tattoo on the young woman's thigh. Police special bullets in the corpse's vagina prompt Boudreau's memory of Garrett Richard Lockman, a woman-hating con man who liked to pretend that he was an undercover cop. Before many pages pass, Lockman has killed dozens more and, along with Boudreau, readers are running into the sort of brick walls and booby traps that face a hard-working street cop under superiors with personal agendas and political clout. Cop and killer become obsessed with each other and dance through the plot as Beale blunders and an arrogant FBI team remains intent on solving the case without help from a lowly vice cop, forcing Boudreau to go it alone until unexpected help comes from his ex-wife's psychotherapist. As the 1980s roll by, young bodies keep floating, Lockman keeps conning and Beale for a time puts Boudreau on the suspect list. Finally, Lockman is picked up on an old warrant, allowing Boudreau, in a surprising twist, to serve up his own brand of justice. Thorp creates a credible scenario rife with life-sized characters and scenes of stunning violence and suspense; his best novel in years, this will nail readers from start to finish. 75,000 first printing; major ad/promo.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.

The Green River serial killings during the 1980s in the Pacific Northwest remain unsolved. More than 50 young women, most of them prostitutes and drifters, were killed. Thorp offers a gritty fictional version of the infamous murders. In it, the cunning killer-protagonist is manipulative sociopath Garrett Lockman. Thorp balances the viewpoint of the hard-drinking, pornography-loving murderer with that of tough Seattle vice-cop Philippe Boudreau. Early on, New York transplant Boudreau is convinced that Lockman is the killer, but because of police department politics, he isn't allowed on the Green River investigative team until late in the case. The novel's characters are sharply drawn, especially the creepy Lockman, who finally meets his demise in a surprising, maybe even innovative, manner. True-crime accounts are often recommended because they read like fiction. This fictionalization of true crimes is recommended because it seems as realistic, as authentic, as the best nonfiction. True-crime junkies and hard-boiled detective fans alike will have a field day. Sue-Ellen Beauregard

Thorp's (Rainbow Drive, Ivy Bks., 1992) latest thriller is based on a series of unsolved killings during the 1980s in the Pacific Northwest's Green River area. Seattle detective Phil Boudreau, a tough, smart, steetwise vice cop, becomes obsessed with solving a series of grisly murders, the majority of which involve young female prostitutes and runaways. Written in terse but graphic prose, the novel provides in-depth views of a sociopathic mind and homoerotic relationships. Along the way, readers witness the character growth of Boudreau and his relationships with fellow police officers, including a developing love interest. This novel is not for the faint of heart, yet once readers become accustomed to the graphic prose, they may not be able to put River aside. Recommended for adult fiction collections.
Erna Chamberlain, Univ. of Binghamton, N.Y.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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