From Amazon
Jon Evans's compelling thriller will indeed take you to dark places, both physically and psychically. You could call it a travelogue, as it takes the reader on a trek both through the twisted mind of a serial killer (or killers?) and to such exotic locales as the Himalayas, the Saharan desert, the jungles of Indonesia and the Moroccan gorge setting of the explosive finale.
Dark Places opens in the majestic mountains of the Annapurna, where Paul Wood's enjoyment of the vistas is rudely shattered when he stumbles across the mutilated body of another hiker. To his horror, he finds that the signature of the killer matches the one found earlier on the body of his lover, Laura, who was brutally murdered when the two were travelling through Africa. Paul becomes obsessed with hunting down the killer, a task complicated by his suspicion that there may be copycat psychopaths out there too. Tracking down the guilty requires the cooperation of Paul's fellow travellers from that fatal African trip, but he comes to believe one member of that group may well be the quarry he is chasing.
The action in Dark Places comes fast and furious, but Evans gives the reader occasional respite with fascinating descriptions of such exotic locales as the Himalayas, the Sahara, the jungles of Indonesia, and the Moroccan gorge setting of the explosive finale. He has clearly travelled extensively himself, and has an excellent understanding of the subculture of adventure-addicted young Western globetrotters. Dark Places likely won't have you digging up your backpack and joining that crowd, as it vividly describes the ease with which a predator could operate within the milieu, while bringing back memories of Charles Sobhraj, a real-life killer who did exactly that back in the '70s. With his debut outing, Jon Evans has delivered an adrenalin-laced winner. --Kerry Doole
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
From Publishers Weekly
In this haunting suspense debut, Evans takes the reader on a page-turning adventure across five continents in search of a gruesome serial killer who has been targeting travelers in Third World nations. Paul Wood, a San Francisco computer programmer and rugged budget backpacker, is hiking in the Himalayas when he stumbles upon a mutilated corpse with a Swiss army knife plunged into each eye. This is a freakish coincidence: Paul discovered the body of his then girlfriend mysteriously murdered in much the same way two years before in remote central Africa. Finding that even more murders seem to fit the eerie pattern, he begins his own investigation with the help of a (poorly developed) Bosnian love interest named Talena. Eventually joined by his backpacking friends from the fateful trip through central Africa, he decides to take justice into his own hands. Entertaining (but totally implausible) plot twists will keep readers guessing through the book's bone-chilling buildup and brutal climax, while slangy, conversational prose will make it easy to fly through the pages. But secondary characters are often flat and unrealistic, and Paul's vigilante bravado and world-traveler cockiness won't be to everyone's taste.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.