Messiah by Boris Starling

Messiah

by Boris Starling

A stunning, shocking, wonderfully well written debut reminiscent of James Patterson and one that will catapault Boris Starling to the front rank of thriller writers.

London is in the grip of a heatwave: airless days, strange steamy nights and a killer stalking the streets. Wealthy men are being murdered to some mysterious pattern, with no clues left behind, only corpses with silver spoons in place of their tongues…

Set against this merciless butcher is DCI Red Metcalfe, an investigator with a celebrated ability to get under the skin and into the minds of the deranged killers he hunts. But as the city swelters and the body count rises, Red’s own tortured past begins to turn against him – and the city is safe for no one. Sometimes, it is said, it takes a killer to catch a killer…

The most compelling and suspenseful British thriller to come along in years, and Boris Starling is a startling and powerful talent to watch. Messiah is guaranteed to haunt your dreams…

Reviewed by BookeryBliss on

3 of 5 stars

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I was a little frustrated with this book in the beginning. It started out a little 2 dimensional, and the back and forth of present and past was quite annoying at the time. Especially when the chapters didn't indicate the change of time or tone of the second "story" (until later in the book) Despite that, I found myself glued to the pages eager to know the ending and the plot held my interest until the very end.
At times it felt like the author got side-tracked when explaining minor details and filling the pages with what I felt was just "fluff", but overall the book was worth it and the ending had a twist I didn't see coming. I enjoyed the storyline, and the weaving of characters, details, and the suspense was well written and exciting.

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  • Started reading
  • 12 July, 2012: Finished reading
  • 12 July, 2012: Reviewed