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Dead or Alive

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Santa Fe police chief Kevin Kerney is on the hunt for a deranged killer in this “taut and tidy thriller”(San Diego Union-Tribune) from the New York Times bestselling author of Residue.
Living in London while his wife serves as a military attaché at the American Embassy, recently retired Santa Fe police chief Kevin Kerney gets an early morning phone call that changes everything and sends him hurrying home to his New Mexico ranch. Riley Burke, his partner in a horse-training enterprise, has been mowed down on Kerney’s doorstep by an escaped prisoner cutting a murderous swath through New Mexico.
As the killings mount, Kerney teams up with his half-Apache son, Lieutenant Clayton Istee of the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Department, to hunt for a psychotic murderer with a growing appetite for blood—who has no intention of being taken alive.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 20, 2008
      McGarrity's 12th Kevin Kerney novel (after Death Song
      ) displays the author's usual fine sense of place along with an unusual amount of gore. When escaped convict Craig Larson goes on a rampage that includes the murder of Riley Burke, a neighbor and business partner of former Santa Fe police chief Kerney, that's enough to bring Kerney, at least temporarily, out of retirement—and back from London, where Kerney's wife is a U.S. embassy employee. Larson's crime spree becomes more deadly as he tacks back and forth as far south as Texas and north almost to Colorado. Kerney, acting as a special investigator with the New Mexico State Police, and his lawman son, Clayton Istee, partner up for the statewide manhunt. McGarrity is particularly adept at portraying multijurisdictional investigations. While this isn't a good starting place for newcomers, series fans will relish the deepening relationship of Kerney and Istee, who only recently learned they were father and son.

    • Kirkus

      November 15, 2008
      Ex –Santa Fe Police Chief Kevin Kerney comes out of retirement to track a monster.

      Craig Larson is a psychopath 's psychopath. Remorseless and relentless, he 'll kill anything that moves. Or not. And whether he does or doesn 't in any given situation is both unpredictable and inexplicable, since he himself has no clue. On his way to prison, Larson overpowers a guard, steals his weapon, stabs him in the eye —a deliberately selected target —and launches a one-man guerrilla attack on much of New Mexico. Early in this maniacal murder spree, he blows away young Riley Burke, a partner in Kevin Kerney 's ranching operation. At the time, Santa Fe 's former chief of police, famous in law-enforcement circles as a fearsome combination of bloodhound, bulldog and elephant, is living in London with his wife Sara, Army colonel and military attach to the American embassy. Learning of Riley 's death, Kerney returns at once to New Mexico, where he joins Lieutenant Clayton Istee and just about every other police officer in the state in a manhunt that has "dead or alive " written all over it. By this time, Larson 's homicidal rampage has developed a much sharper focus. He wants to kill cops. Cops want to kill him. It doesn 't get any more basic than that.

      McGarrity (Death Song, 2008, etc.) plays to one of his core strengths —the police procedural —but the human drama, another of his usual strengths, is muted here. Fans will miss it.

      (COPYRIGHT (2008) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Library Journal

      December 15, 2008
      McGarrity has a long list of solid mysteries in his Kevin Kerney series. Unfortunately, the 12th (after "Death Song") is not up to the same standard. Like all the Kerney books, it is set in New Mexico, peopled with a cast of likable characters, and features McGarrity's crisp and colorful writing. However, readers familiar with Cormac McCarthy's "No Country for Old Men" (2005) or the Coen brothers' 2007 movie version will recognize the plot of the madman roaming the countryside and ruthlessly killing anyone who gets in his way. McGarrity's latest is as well done as McCarthy's so that those who haven't read "No Country" may be satisfied with the story of ex-sheriff Kerney, his army wife, and their family. Yet even McGarrity's knack for using the intriguing New Mexico setting as an integral aspect of the plot cannot redeem this relentless bloodbath of a novel. Coming so soon after "No Country", it just seems derivative. Buy only where the series is popular.Ann Forister, Roseville, CA

      Copyright 2008 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      November 15, 2008
      McGarritys Kevin Kerney series, set mainly in New Mexico, mixes several elements: the early novels combined razor-sharp procedural detail with a gripping noirish edge, while the last few swapped the noir for a full-paletteportrayal of a cops domestic life. This time were back on the edge. Kerney, retired as Sante Fes chief of police, is living in London with wife Sarah, an Army colonel posted toBritain, and son Patrick when he learns that his New Mexico partner in a horse-raising business has been murdered at his ranch. Its back to Santa Fe for Kerney, where he accepts a temporary assignment with the state police and joins the hunt for the killer. McGarrity juggles point of view here, moving from Kerney and his Apache son, Clayton, also a cop, as they follow the trail, to the killer himself, a lethal but oddly introspective sociopath right out of a Stephen Hunter novel. Readers who favor McGarrity wearing black rather than an apron will be well pleased by this strong return to his earlier style.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2008, American Library Association.)

    • Kirkus

      November 15, 2008
      Ex –Santa Fe Police Chief Kevin Kerney comes out of retirement to track a monster.

      Craig Larson is a psychopath's psychopath. Remorseless and relentless, he ' ll kill anything that moves. Or not. And whether he does or doesn't in any given situation is both unpredictable and inexplicable, since he himself has no clue. On his way to prison, Larson overpowers a guard, steals his weapon, stabs him in the eye —a deliberately selected target —and launches a one-man guerrilla attack on much of New Mexico. Early in this maniacal murder spree, he blows away young Riley Burke, a partner in Kevin Kerney's ranching operation. At the time, Santa Fe's former chief of police, famous in law-enforcement circles as a fearsome combination of bloodhound, bulldog and elephant, is living in London with his wife Sara, Army colonel and military attach to the American embassy. Learning of Riley's death, Kerney returns at once to New Mexico, where he joins Lieutenant Clayton Istee and just about every other police officer in the state in a manhunt that has "dead or alive " written all over it. By this time, Larson's homicidal rampage has developed a much sharper focus. He wants to kill cops. Cops want to kill him. It doesn't get any more basic than that.

      McGarrity (Death Song, 2008, etc.) plays to one of his core strengths —the police procedural —but the human drama, another of his usual strengths, is muted here. Fans will miss it.

      (COPYRIGHT (2008) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

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