3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars
Deviant Thriller Surprisingly Good, July 15 2010
By A. Whitney - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Boys from Santa Cruz: A Thriller (Hardcover)
Pre-release customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program
First, I must say that I don't go for "thrillers" and would have passed this up had I not been raised in Santa Cruz. So I thought I'd give it a spin to see how my hometown figured into the story. I wasn't suspecting a goulash of snuff films, drug dealing, pre-op transsexuals, sex addiction and demon worship. "The Boys from Santa Cruz" got my attention. At first the story seems like a heap of bad luck has roosted upon teenager Luke Sweet. He is raised in appalling circumstances devoid of affection and in the midst of places that no adult, let alone a child, should be. He has to make do for himself and ends up in the most bizarre and dangerous situations, which he often does not handle well. As the less-than-perfect FBI agent Pender attempts to bring Luke under control, the story takes a more sinister turn.
I found it to be an engaging story with just enough twists to keep me interested. There were also plenty of Santa Cruz settings to make me feel that Nasaw had actually spent time in my hometown, unconventional as it is.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
The Boys From Santa Cruz, Nov 17 2010
By P. Bergbauer "Reading Raven" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Boys from Santa Cruz: A Thriller (Hardcover)
Pre-release customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program
This is the fifth E. L. Pender book in the series. I have read all of Nasaw's books and I think it is better to read these in order, starting with "The Girls He Adored."
E. L. Pender is a retired FBI agent who was never your typical agent. Noted for his mismatched and colorful clothes, Pender reminds me of a giant teddy bear.
In this novel, the story shifts back to 1985 when Pender was an active agent on a case involving snuff films. During this case, Pender's investigation connects him with a teen, Luke Sweet, whose father was the one linked to the snuff film ring. Luke appears to also be connected with his father's business and eventually ends up in a rehab camp.
The story then brings the reader to 1995. Pender comes across names from the past that remind him of his prior case of Luke Sweet, which brings him back to California to pursue his gut intuition that his older case was never resolved.
Nasaw writes a solid thriller which is fast paced with twists that make this novel hard to put down. I love his Pender character because of his humor, wacky dress code, and his ability to catch the bad guy.
I look forward to reading the next Pender book.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Enjoyable Read, April 25 2010
By David K. Watson "DKW" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Boys from Santa Cruz: A Thriller (Hardcover)
Pre-release customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program
I have to admit that the fact that I lived in Santa Cruz all but a couple of the years from the late 1960's until 2007 was what attracted me to this particular title. On the other hand, maybe having been there during the "murder capital of the world" era has kept me from being a huge fan of the psycho killer genre, but I have read a few over the years.
I enjoyed The Boys from Santa Cruz: A Thriller. I found it well-paced easy reading with the requisite number of gruesome images and false leads. There is a major plot twist in the second half that I did not see coming, which is always a nice surprise (assuming it makes sense, which it does here). The local geography seems correct, but I did note one minor anachronism: in 1972, the Santa Cruz Town Clock was in storage; it was installed at the current location in time for a bicentennial dedication in 1976 and restoration was finished in 1977.
I thought the development of Pender was a little light, but this made sense when I discovered that Pender had appeared in four previous novels by Nasaw. I expect to go back at some point and read some of the earlier novels and would recommend The Boys from Santa Cruz: A Thriller to any fan of the genre.