Cemetery Dance (Pendergast #9)
Pendergast-the world's most enigmatic FBI Special Agent-returns to <ST1:CITY w:st="on"><ST1:PLACE w:st="on">New York City</ST1:PLACE></ST1:CITY> to investigate a murderous cult.
William Smithback, a New York Times reporter, and his wife Nora Kelly, a <ST1:PLACETYPE w:st="on">Museum</ST1:PLACETYPE> of <ST1...more
William Smithback, a New York Times reporter, and his wife Nora Kelly, a <ST1:PLACETYPE w:st="on">Museum</ST1:PLACETYPE> of <ST1...more
Mass Market Paperback, 496 pages
Published
April 1st 2010
by Vision
(first published January 1st 2009)
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With Cemetery Dance, Preston and Child's return Special Agent Pendergast to his most familiar setting, New York City, where he rejoins the gruff but big-hearted Lt. D'Agosta in investigating the vicious murder of one of the series' regular characters. The story is well-crafted with a persistent sense of foreboding evoking a nightmare like quality that kept this reader precariously on the edge of his seat. While I personally do not usually enjoy stories using voodoo as a plot point, I confess t...more
There are many conflicts that are going on in the storyline of Cemetary Dance. The main conflict though in the book is the conflict between the citizens of New York and the inhabitants of the Ville. The Ville are these people all in a cult right outside of New York, they practice a weird religion. Mr. Smith was on the brink of exposing these people before he was killed by a zombii. He was brutally slaughtered in his apartment by Colin Fearing who is dead... or is he. Colin almost kills his ...more
I don't think that I have read all 8 of the other books in this series, but I have read at least a handful. First off, I did like the book. Believe it or not I feel that it was "lighter" than some of the other chapters in Agent Pendergast's "history". This of course is despite the brutal murder of a carry-over character right at the start of the book (with more to follow of course!)
Like all of their books, it was inventive, had a decent plot with a few good twis...more
Like all of their books, it was inventive, had a decent plot with a few good twis...more
The reading by Rene Auberjonois was a little distracting initially. He was a good reader, and used talented inflection to portray emotion. It was the quality of his voice that distracted me in the beginning. Where the voice of Peter Giles (who read The Scarecrow for my last audio book) had a somewhat "neutral" voice that allowed me to concentrate on the story, I found Rene's voice so distinctive that it distracted me. I'd sit there and wonder, "What is it about his voice? Is it an...more
Vodou and such in this one ... Pendergast is a lesser character and I missed his involvment, which was still included but not to eh same degree as other books in the series.
I liked it in terms of reading it and not putting it down over and over cuz zI couldn't enjoy it, but it is getting more bizarre even than before. I guess vamps and creatures of the night are the current thing to wirte about....so at least there is a bit more of a mystery here.
Google map is fun to use...more
I liked it in terms of reading it and not putting it down over and over cuz zI couldn't enjoy it, but it is getting more bizarre even than before. I guess vamps and creatures of the night are the current thing to wirte about....so at least there is a bit more of a mystery here.
Google map is fun to use...more
Wow, I just finished this book and it brought back the feeling I had when I first read Relic and met Agent Pendergast. When I first heard that this book had been released I was a little hesitant as I did not enjoy The Wheel of Darkness as much as some of Preston’s and Childs’ other books. But the first 10 pages will blow your mind! I could not believe how they started off the book and I have to admit I was a little devastated.
That said I felt like after those first few pages you f...more
That said I felt like after those first few pages you f...more
I've decided that I'm going to designate this book as a "ripping good yarn" because, by golly, that's what it is. This is one of those books where you just have to say to yourself, okay, this is totally escape reading and it's so far-fetched that it can't possibly ever be true. Once you get past that hurdle, then you can do what the authors intended for you to do: sit back, relax, and have fun with it. If you can't do that, then move along, because this book is definitely not for you....more
Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child are as gods to me. I worship them. The brilliant Brimstone--the first in the Diogenes Trilogy within their eerie, compelling thrillers that feature FBI Special Agent Aloysius Pendergast--enthralled me from page one. Preston and Child are erudite without being stuffy. They scare the hell out of a girl without resorting to the cheap or lurid. And their prose is to die for.
I'm in mad love with the eccentric, intellectual, deliciously Southern Pendergast...more
I'm in mad love with the eccentric, intellectual, deliciously Southern Pendergast...more
I am fond of walking around old cemeteries, so naturally the title caught my attention. A well-known journalist, Bill Smithback, and his wife, archeologist Nora Kelly, are celebrating their one-year anniversary in their New York apartment. When Nora goes to the corner store, someone breaks into their apartment and kills Bill, then attacks Nora in the hallway as she returns home. Eyewitnesses identify the killer: Colin Fearing. There's just one problem: Fearing died ten days ago.
Lt. V...more
Lt. V...more
“Cemetery Dance” is the latest book in a series that started with Relic. In this latest installment the setting is NYC and the story is centered on Voudou, zombiis, animal rights, greed, as well as the dance that is always played between people in relationships. The relationship between the main characters, which the authors Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child have developed into complex have invested us with deep interest.
The people that populate this series are FBI agent Aloysius Prenderga...more
The people that populate this series are FBI agent Aloysius Prenderga...more
William Smithback, reporter au New York Times, et sa femme Nora Kelly, archéologue au Muséum d'Histoire naturelle, sont sauvagement agressés dans leur appartement de l'Upper West Side de Manhattan. Si Nora en réchappe, Smithback, lui, est tué...
Le meurtrier est rapidement identifié par des témoins et des caméras de vidéosurveillance. Il s'agit de leur étrange et sinistre voisin, Fearing... pourtant mort et enterré depuis plusieurs jours déjà !
Un tel mystère ne peut laisser insensible...more
Le meurtrier est rapidement identifié par des témoins et des caméras de vidéosurveillance. Il s'agit de leur étrange et sinistre voisin, Fearing... pourtant mort et enterré depuis plusieurs jours déjà !
Un tel mystère ne peut laisser insensible...more
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
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This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
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My favorite character EVER, Pendergast! Who could not love him? I am addicted to these wonderful books by Preston/Child and usually give them highter marks. However, I am devasted by the loss of a beloved character. I totally didn't believe it. Right to the bitter end, I thought it was a ploy, a joke, a hoax. Alas, it was not. It's going to take me awhile to forgive them for that one :)
The storyline was solid for the most part, with everything naturally coming together in the ...more
The storyline was solid for the most part, with everything naturally coming together in the ...more
This is the very first novel I read by these authors. Actually it is more appropriate to say" listened to". I have a long 1 hr commute each way to work and back and I listen to books on cd.I don't know how the story would have held up if I had read it but the narrated version was absolutely fantasic. It is like listening to a 1930's radio show. I actually didnt want to get out of the car. They split the action between numerous simultanious plot lines that converge at the end. They alw...more
I have been following the Preston-Child series on Aloysius Pendergast for quite some time now. Seems I have read almost a good majority of the books except Reliquary & Still Life With Crows (which I am still looking for). In a series devoted to Pendergast, this is the ninth book in the line.
The tale begins with one of the most well known characters in the Pendergast tales getting murdered and from then on moves to a Zombii cult, an illegal settlement,murder and general mayhem. One t...more
The tale begins with one of the most well known characters in the Pendergast tales getting murdered and from then on moves to a Zombii cult, an illegal settlement,murder and general mayhem. One t...more
Thanks to Teresa's suggestion, I started my first Pendergast novel---if i could endure Twilight's vampires and werewolves then surely this book about zombii couldn't be half bad. It's so much better! I fell in instant like with the inscrutable intelligence of Special Agent Pendergast and even if one doesn't believe in the hoodoo of voodoo, the authors made the plot seem plausible.
Basically the plot is about how and why one prominent New York Times reporter William Smithback Jr was killed...more
Basically the plot is about how and why one prominent New York Times reporter William Smithback Jr was killed...more
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Really enjoyed this. The opening of the story really grabbed my attention. There were some far-fetched, unrealistic elements but also some beautifully described settings. It's the first book I've read in this series but won't be the last :-)
authors at their entertaining best, a Prendergast novel.
The latest Pendergast thriller begins with a murder that is apparently committed by a man who, 10 days earlier, was pronounced dead and then buried. But the eyewitness is sure it’s the same man, and footage from a security camera appears to confirm it. How does a dead man commit murder? And why this particular victim? Pendergast, the FBI special agent who frequently takes on personal assignments on a freelance basis, teams up on...more
The latest Pendergast thriller begins with a murder that is apparently committed by a man who, 10 days earlier, was pronounced dead and then buried. But the eyewitness is sure it’s the same man, and footage from a security camera appears to confirm it. How does a dead man commit murder? And why this particular victim? Pendergast, the FBI special agent who frequently takes on personal assignments on a freelance basis, teams up on...more
Pendergast is back in NY city getting involved in another case, this one involving Zombies, a strange secret cult in a wild wooded are on Manhattan Island. Nora of previous books has been married a year to here reporter husband(Stephen?) {as you can see I am doing this without the book in front of me}. On their anniversary eve at home Nora goes out for a special cake and when she gets back she see the apartment in disarray with blood all over and Stephen on the floor just before she is attacked...more
I really like the Pendergast series. It is starting to reach the point where I kind of wish the authors weren't expected to turn out a book a year, but this one was an improvement over the last one. Largely that's due to the fact that this one was set back in New York, so the larger cast of characters was available. I can't say that I was sorry to see Smithback die - my friends know how I feel about journalism. One of the things I like so much about this series - besides the esoteric Southern br...more
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A convoluted plot that, ultimately, doesn't make a lot of sense, with the death of a recurring character at the heart of it--that doesn't make much sense either, and on occasional feels a trifle tasteless. I was glad to read about Pendergast and D'Agosta's continuing adventures fighting crime together, since I think theirs is the best and most interesting dynamic in the entire series. But the crime they are solving here is actually more laughable than those in the other Preston and Child books, ...more
A crime thriller with a good helping of voodoo thrown in. Based in and around New York, a police officer and his FBI colleague investigate the murder of a friend by someone declared dead a few days previously.
The chapters are short, the action is fast, there's a light sprinkling of humour, it's very easy to read.
Apparently there's a series based on the FBI character, Pendergast. This is my first time reading from this collection and it was completely self contained, so i...more
Aloysius Pendergast, agent for the FBI, along with Vincent D’Agosta of the NYPD must solve the murder of a newspaper reporter and friend brutally executed in his home by what appears to be a walking dead person or zombii. Following a convoluted trail our heroes save the life of Nora Henderson famous archeologist and uncover the plot of a man who would try to become one of the richest persons in the world through murder and extortion. Learn what a leucotome is while being acquain...more
It's unfortunate that the last two Pendergast books have been so lackluster. Nothing seems to compare to the Pendergast trilogy. The characters seem to have reached their peak long ago and are no longer developing. This installment kills off one of the major characters in the series in the first few pages. The mystery surrounding his death involves zombies and a religious cult. There isn't very much Pendergast sass and attitude in this one, and D'Gosta is angry and biased like a stereotypical co...more
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JG (The Introverted Reader)
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review of another edition
Recommended to JG (The Introverted Reader) by:
Durrand P.
FBI Special Agent Pendergast is assisting Lt. D'Agosta in the investigation of a murder that has hit them both close to home. Their friend, Bill Smithback, has been murdered in his home on the night of his first anniversary. The perp has been positively id'd by Smithback's wife, Nora Kelly, and several others in the building as neighbor Colin Fearing. The problem? Colin died about two weeks earlier. Twists and turns lead through animal rights groups, allegations of voodoo, squatters on publ...more
First book I read about FBI inspector Pendergast was "The Relic". Great novel, much better than the movie adaptation (as it should be the case :))
I like the story's pace, it's fast and something is going on all the time. When it comes to thrillers this is something I truly look for and enjoy.
Story begins with a bizarre murder of a journalist (introduced in yet another Douglas/Child novel "Thunderhead"). As the mystery unfolds all supernatural elements ...more
I like the story's pace, it's fast and something is going on all the time. When it comes to thrillers this is something I truly look for and enjoy.
Story begins with a bizarre murder of a journalist (introduced in yet another Douglas/Child novel "Thunderhead"). As the mystery unfolds all supernatural elements ...more
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Douglas Preston was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1956, and grew up in the deadly boring suburb of Wellesley. Following a distinguished career at a private nursery school--he was almost immediately expelled--he attended public schools and the Cambridge School of Weston. Notable events in his early life included the loss of a fingertip at the age of three to a bicycle; the loss of his two fr...more
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