Product Details
Messiah

Messiah
By Boris Starling

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Product Description

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...


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #213882 in Books
  • Published on: 1999-02-01
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 352 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
When Thomas Harris created the concept of the detective with almost supernatural ability to get into the mind of a serial killer, he can have had little idea that this would become the most imitated of elements in thriller for years to come (the TV thriller Millenium spins this one aspect of Harris into a whole series). So when a reader encounters yet another variation on the theme, the writer involved is really obliged to pull off something extra special to avoid seeming desperately warmed-over. Does Boris Starling pull off the trick with Messiah? Within a few chapters, it's evident that Starling has a particularly pungent grasp of locale, successfully diverting the attention from these over-familiar elements. The real skill here is in a marvellously detailed picture of London in the grip of a heat wave. As wealthy men are murdered to some mysterious pattern (the corpses left with silver spoons in place of their tongues), it's down to DCI Red Metcalfe to get under the skin of this remoreseless killer. Starling has created a memorable protagonist in Metcalfe, with the detective's murky past playing a key element as the final crisis approaches at speed. There's little new here, but Starling demonstrates real elan in the difficult task of reinvigorating the Harris formula. (Kirkus UK)

Synopsis
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...

From the Author
Makes 'Silence of the Lambs' look like 'Alice in Wonderland'
The first two corpses are found within an hour of each other. One man hanged with his hands trussed behind his back, the other beaten to death on his living-room floor. Both stripped to their underpants. Both with their tongues cut out. Both with silver spoons jammed into their mouths. For the first time in his career as the Metropolitan Police's leading exponent in solving serial murders, Red Metcalfe is baffled. Their deaths apart, the victims have no connection with each other. The killer has left no traces at either scene, and he makes no effort to communicate with the police. For three months, Red and his small hand-picked team - the athletic Jez Clifton, the sassy Kate Beauchamp and the irascible Duncan Warren - chase their own tails. They call the killer Silver Tongue, because that is the only name they have for him. Then Silver Tongue strikes again, and again. He beheads his third victim and flays the fourth alive. And still he never makes a mistake. Never leaves forensic evidence on the bodies, and never lets himself be seen. Five men have been killed by the time Red works out could ever have imagined. Red and his team try everything they know to catch the monster. Their journey takes them through the circles of evil which beat under the heart of London. They are sucked into the madness of millennial cults and spat out into the choking reality of media hysteria and broken marriages. More corpses appear, found sawn in half or rotted away in hermetically-sealed flats. With every successive murder, they narrow the parameters of their search further. But still Silver Tongue slips effortlessly from their grasp. As Red's desperation deepens and his self-esteem is worn away, so his own demons rise. The traffic accident which he never reported. The decision to turn over his brother Eric to the police for murder. The urges to kill and maim like the criminals he pursues. And then the killer begins to play directly on Red's diminishing grip on sanity. Silver Tongue puts hunted and hunter on a collision course towards a shattering climax, when he and Red play out a macabre re-enactment of the most famous betrayal in history. Messiah is far more than your standard thriller. It is a novel which deals on several levels with complex issues of treachery and faith, while never letting the pace flag. As a hero, Red Metcalfe is empathetic but deeply flawed, a man demonised by his past and running scared from his future. As his nemesis, Silver Tongue is one of the most chilling murderers ever to have appeared in print. Messiah is a potent cocktail of suspense, theology, philosophy and human nature, and it captures the essence of the unsettled times in which we live. Messiah is a W.H. Smith 'Fresh Talent' title for 1999.


Customer Reviews

Gruesome, gripping and intricate5
I found it impossible to put this book down. Starling has woven a story which is both shocking, gruesome and thrilling, taking the time to explore the psychology of both the killer and the main character, Red Metcalfe throughout the story until they come together in a final, gripping conclusion.

I loved the way the story pulled together - there are clues delivered throughout, and as a reader, you are just as convinced by the false leads as Metcalfe and his team. You can sense their frustration as the body count grows, and the evidence continues to elude them. It is a clever mix of action, graphic description and a strong, coherent storyline that makes this book unmissable.

An ok book about chasing down a psychopath3
I really don't know what to think of the book. It should probably seem as another object lesson in not reading things out of order or seeing the tv show before you read the book.

In this book, a serial killer decides to kill people in the manner that the apostles who shared their name were killer. As result, a Simon is cut in half, a Peter (I think, feel free to correct me if I'm wrong) is crucified upside down and so on. In short then, it's a pretty creepy book and probably not for those among us who get easily upset or have a vivid imagination.

The problem for me was that I read Starling's second book a few years ago and that book pretty much gave the plot of this book away (in general terms). It wasn't helped by the fact that they made the book into a television show in England and with the story like it is here, I wasn't likely to forget what happened in the show (incidentally Ken Stot played the "beer sodden cop" leading the investigation -anyone who knows him knows that he's got that area of the acting market sewn up here).

So all in all, I don't know what to think but part of me was left feeling underwhelmed by the book because its major twists have been given away if you've seen anything related to this book before.

Messiah5
I have just read this book on holiday and I couldn't put it down I was griped from the bottom of page 1. I'd never read this author before but I can't wait to read more now. The short to the point chapters make this an easy read as well a fantastic thriller.