Review by Booklist Review
Picking up two months after the events chronicled in Brimstone (2004), which saw the untimely demise of popular series hero FBI Special Agent Pendergast, this new novel by the Preston-Child team brings together characters from previous novels. The people closest to Pendergast are dying in horrible ways, and only one man can be responsible: Diogenes, Pendergast's long-lost brother, who has supposedly been dead for years. Meanwhile, at the New York Museum of Natural History, an internal battle rages over the rightful ownership of some ancient relics. Will these two stories link up? Well, of course, no surprise there. It's how they link up that packs the surprises. This is an ambitious novel with a gimmicky plot that could have landed with a resounding thud. Instead, the story soars; the cast of familiar characters--researcher Margo Green, journalist Bill Smithback, curator Nora Kelly--is given a chance to stretch, and the authors deliver an exhilarating finale. Good stuff, and there's more to come, as the novel's last lines make clear. --David Pitt Copyright 2005 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
The always reliable team of Preston and Child revisit Special FBI Agent Aloysius Pendergast, last seen in 2004's Brimstone, and others from past bestsellers (Relic; The Cabinet of Curiosities) in this intriguing thriller set in and around New York City and the halls of the Museum of Natural History. Born a misanthropic loner but driven insane by seeing his parents burned alive when he was a teen, Aloysius's madman brother, Diogenes, has begun murdering Aloysius's friends. Aloysius begs old friend Lt. Vincent D'Agosta to help him defeat his brother, and Vincent does his best while the brothers spar and others die. There are a number of subplots, one involving an ATM robber and flasher known as the Dangler and another focusing on the museum's exhibition of sacred masks, but these fade away as the deadly duel between the brothers takes center stage. Think Sherlock Holmes locked in a death struggle with his smarter brother, Mycroft. Like Brimstone, this novel doesn't end so much as simply pause while the authors work on the next installment. While it's not as good as some of their earlier efforts, it's still pretty darn good. Agents, Eric Simonoff at Janklow & Nesbit and Matthew Snyder at CAA. Major ad/promo, 10-city author tour. (June 7) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
Preston and Child put a twist on the biblical story of Cain and Abel in this sequel to Brimstone. Summoned to a mysterious meeting, police officer Vincent D'Agosta hopes to discover that his friend, FBI agent Pendergast, somehow survived the events chronicled in the aforementioned title. Instead, Vincent receives a letter that Pendergast asked to be delivered in the event of his death. In this cryptic missive, Pendergast begs for help in stopping his brother, Diogenes, from committing the perfect crime, which will probably occur in two days. But Diogenes has already started his crime spree, methodically murdering people close to his dead brother. Now Vincent must not only stop a genius from murdering again but also protect himself and his friends on the hit list. A rare second book in a trilogy that actually improves on the first; fans and newcomers alike will relish the numerous twists and relentless plot line. Add this to your mandatory reading list. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 2/15/05; see interview with the authors on p. 106.]-Jeff Ayers, Seattle P.L. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Second in the series featuring mysterious, ultrawealthy, polymathic FBI Special Agent Aloysius Pendergast. Brimstone (2004) ended on an outrageous cliffhanger: Pendergast about to be torn apart by boar-hounds.Now, this round opens with a poisoned, blood-spattered discussion of The Waste Land, then moves from one bizarre comic-strip panel to the next. Lieutenant Vincent D'Agosta, Watson to Pendergast's Holmes, has moved in with Captain Laura Hayward, both NYPD, when he gets a "posthumous" note from Pendergast that tells him to take a leave of absence, use the $500,000 Pendergast has put into D'Agosta's bank account, and stop the nameless but horrible crime about to be committed by Pendergast's warped younger brother, Diogenes, a badly wired genius. A visit by D'Agosta to Mount Mercy Hospital for the Criminally Insane on Little Governor's Island allows the ancient family murderess Great-aunt Cornelia Pendergast to reveal to D'Agosta that Diogenes saw his parents burned alive as Satanists by a New Orleans mob. (Satan looms large in Brimstone.) Diogenes' hideous crime is set for January 28, a few days off, the day he'll kill Aloysius; he's already killed Aloysius' two closest friends from his youth and has his eye on D'Agosta, and perhaps on Laura. More bodies drop, including that of Margo Green, a Museum of Natural History officer who helped Pendergast break an earlier case. Now, Diogenes announces, it's time for D'Agosta to die. Pendergast decides to go to a great forensic profiler to get a fix on Diogenes. Arise, Eli Glinn, profiler supreme and for once a match for Pendergast. In an inspired chapter, Glinn's shrink digs into Pendergast for repressed childhood memories about his brother. When the 28th arrives, Diogenes has already penetrated Pendergast's sealed mansion on Riverside Drive. Cary Grant fans will delight in the arrival of gemologist George Kaplan (North by Northwest) while the theft of Lucifer's Heart, the world's greatest diamond, leads to yet another cliffhanger. Goes down like cheddar-flavored potato chips. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.