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Thrillers, Crime Fiction, Police Stories
Triptych by Karin Slaughter — book cover

Triptych

by Karin Slaughter
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Overview

In the city of Atlanta, young women are dying—at the hands of a killer who signs his work with a single, chilling act of mutilation. Leaving behind enough evidence to fuel a frenzied police hunt, this cunning madman is bringing together dozens of lives, crossing the boundaries of wealth and race. And the people who are chasing him must cross those boundaries too. Among them is Michael Ormewood, a veteran detective whose marriage is hanging by a thread—and whose arrogance and explosive temper are threatening his career. And Angie Polaski, a beautiful vice cop who was once Michael’s lover before she became his enemy.

But another player has entered the game: a loser ex-con who has stumbled upon the killer’s trail in the most coincidental of ways—someone who may be the key to breaking the case wide open….

Synopsis

TRIPTYCH, Slaughter's brilliantly manipulative stand-alone will thrust readers onto the razorsharpedge between truth and innocence....

For Atlanta detective Michael Ormewood, the investigation into the sadistic murder of a local woman provides a welcome escape from an unhappy marriage and crushing guilt over the near-fatal shooting of his partner. But for John Shelley, an ex-con left with nothing but the certainty of his own innocence, a nightmare is about to begin. And the shocking consequences will leave readers gasping for breath.

AudioFile Earphones Award Winner

Publishers Weekly

Bestseller Slaughter departs from her Grant County crime series (Faithless, etc.) with a stand-alone thriller notable mainly for a jolting mid-book twist similar to one Ira Levin used with more subtlety in A Kiss Before Dying. The case of a prostitute's brutal murder provides a welcome break for Michael Ormewood, a cynical, world-weary Atlanta cop weighed down by dealing with the city's underclass and the heartbreak of a mentally impaired son. Since the victim's tongue was severed, linking the crime to several other recent outrages, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation intervenes. Suspicions focus on a recently paroled sex offender, John Shelley, who viciously butchered a neighbor more than a decade earlier. Slaughter unexpectedly switches the narrative's perspective, but the shock value garnered by the plot twist isn't matched by the predictable denouement. (Aug.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, Karin Slaughter

Karin Slaughter is the New York Times bestselling author of eight novels, including Beyond Reach and A Faint Cold Fear, which was named an International Book of the Month Club selection; she contributed to and edited Like a Charm. She is a native of Georgia, where she currently lives and is working on her next novel, which Delacorte Press will publish in 2010.

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Editorials

From Barnes & Noble

Most Atlantans ignored or were repelled by the sadistic killing of the young black prostitute, but for detective Michael Ormewood, the investigation of this sordid crime offers a respite from his unhappy home life. His cathartic search becomes complicated when state officials join the probe. The hunt quickly fixes on John Shelley, a recently released sex convict, but Georgia agent Will Trent doubts that they have the right man. Karin Slaughter's Triptych combines plausible forensics with characters that won't let you off the hook.

Publishers Weekly

Bestseller Slaughter departs from her Grant County crime series (Faithless, etc.) with a stand-alone thriller notable mainly for a jolting mid-book twist similar to one Ira Levin used with more subtlety in A Kiss Before Dying. The case of a prostitute's brutal murder provides a welcome break for Michael Ormewood, a cynical, world-weary Atlanta cop weighed down by dealing with the city's underclass and the heartbreak of a mentally impaired son. Since the victim's tongue was severed, linking the crime to several other recent outrages, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation intervenes. Suspicions focus on a recently paroled sex offender, John Shelley, who viciously butchered a neighbor more than a decade earlier. Slaughter unexpectedly switches the narrative's perspective, but the shock value garnered by the plot twist isn't matched by the predictable denouement. (Aug.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Atlanta detective Michael Ormewood squares off against an ex-con with nothing left to lose. Let the Slaughter begin! Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Taking a break from her well-regarded series about Grant County Medical Examiner Dr. Sara Linton (Faithless, 2005, etc.), Slaughter turns to a stand-alone in which horrific physical violence grows out of the psychological kind. Nobody would care about Aleesha Monroe, the prostitute slain in an Atlanta housing project, if her killer hadn't bitten off her tongue. But because Aleesha's the fourth such victim in recent months, Det. Michael Ormewood is under intense pressure from his lieutenant to close the case-even though Michael's already got his hands full juggling a mentally challenged son and a seductive next-door neighbor. The pressure is only intensified when Will Trent, of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation's Special Criminal Apprehension Team, is assigned to the case, and when Will starts to lean on his childhood friend, Vice cop Angie Polaski, for help. Across town, saintlike John Shelley, just released from prison after serving 20 years for rape and murder, has troubles of his own: a dead-end job, a roach-infested apartment, a hard-nosed parole officer and the certainty that everyone who sees him knows he did time for killing a 15-year-old girl. When John, after rescuing a hooker from assault, walks her home and pays her colleague Robin to tell him about her first kiss, the story takes wing, and Slaughter, whose hallmark in her first five novels had been grueling forensics, shows a rare and generous capacity for compassion. Though there are mysteries along the way-how did John manage to compile a stratospheric credit rating while he was in stir, and what's the connection between the violence past and present?-Slaughter has the courage to detonate her biggest bombshells early on,keeping even the wariest readers off-balance and leaving the last act for a settling of accounts. The volcanic heroes and villains, who act both surprisingly and logically, are a welcome sign that Slaughter's trademark franchise only hints at the range of her gifts.

Book Details

Published
July 1, 2007
Publisher
Random House Publishing Group
Pages
512
Format
Mass Market Paperback
ISBN
9780440242925

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