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The Whole Truth [Paperback]

Nancy Pickard
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
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Book Description

Oct 19 2007
"Nancy Pickard pushes at the presumed limits of [crime fiction]" said the Los Angeles Times Book Review, praising the award-winning creator of the Jenny Cain mysteries. Now, Pickard blurs the line between fiction and reality in a novel of gripping intensity, and premieres a superb new heroine: true-crime author Marie Lightfoot. For her next surefire bestseller, Marie is covering the trial of a Florida killer -- a case that penetrates her own life, layer by disturbing layer.

Whether real like Ted Bundy, or imagined like Hannibal Lecter, few killers of our time are in the same league as Raymond Raintree. And as he stands flanked by lawyers in a Florida courtroom, waiting to be convicted for the murder of Natalie Mae McCullen, Marie Lightfoot is taking it all in. A small, gutsy blonde renowned for her true-crime bestsellers, Marie knows the graphic and disturbing case will make her best book yet -- because Raintree's shocking crime, vile beyond imagining, is also impossible to turn away from. But there is something about the case -- and Raintree's involvement -- that bothers her.

No one knows where Raintree, a man as slight and immature as a preteen boy, took Natalie after he abducted her. No one knows how Natalie -- bright, independent, and with no fear of the dark -- could be lured into a stranger's boat on a lonely waterway. And only one witness saw a man who may have been Raintree motoring along in a water taxi on the night Natalie disappeared.

Even if the police can't provide answers, Marie intends to leave no loose ends. Starting with a prison meeting with Raintree, the steely-nerved writer follows a twisted path that leads to Natalie's parents, to a coincidence that doesn't quite gel, and to a place she has resisted all her life: the dark recesses of her own soul, where she hides the secrets of her own lost past.

When Raymond escapes, Marie -- a curious contradiction of celebrity author and introspective loner -- becomes a sitting duck for a killer who just might be smart enough to outwit her. And evil enough to take her to hell before she dies.

A masterpiece of psychological suspense, The Whole Truth is a compelling look at our fascination with the horrific crimes of our time. Nancy Pickard's characters are as close to flesh and blood as fiction can get -- and her writing is as close to perfection.


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With The Whole Truth, Nancy Pickard taps neatly into our national fascination with true crime in a daring novel that seems structurally and philosophically at odds with the conventional mystery story. We know, apparently, "who did it"--as do most true crime readers. People who pick up Ann Rule's The Stranger Beside Me, for example, are usually aware that Ted Bundy was the man responsible for the murders she chronicles. We come to those texts after the fact, as it were; we search not for perpetrator, but for motivation, for explanation. How could these things have happened? What sort of monsters must such criminals be? Pickard's is just such an exploration: it opens with the conviction of one Raymond Raintree for the murder of six-year-old Natalie McCullen, a crime that has shocked South Florida. Marie Lightfoot is in attendance, waiting for the words that will bring to an end The Little Mermaid, the book she is writing about the McCullen case.

However, though it appears her conclusion is written, Marie is deeply worried about the rest of her book: "[Raintree] has no past that anybody, including me, has been able to find. This is not good news for a true crime writer with a book due on her editor's desk in two weeks." But when Ray escapes just after the verdict is read, Marie must accelerate her quest for Ray's actual and emotional origins. Her search has repercussions that lie far beyond the successful completion of her book; she alone can prevent Ray from killing again. Her questions, and their answers, will take her from Florida to the American heartland, from sunshine and palm trees to an unspeakable history of abduction and abuse.

In an intriguing and effective narrative device, Pickard alternates chapters of her "own" text with chapters from The Little Mermaid. This structural twinning hints at the plurality of experience, of the conflicting stories that we create to situate ourselves and others; in realizing that writers must sift through the truth, or truths, to create a coherent narrative, the reader must also sift through the sometimes dovetailing, sometimes elliptical relationship between Pickard's and Lightfoot's stories. The strategy is not wholly successful; at times Pickard introduces elements that lead nowhere, such as Marie's uneasy acceptance of her own parents' disappearance years before; at other times, an apparent impulse to accelerate the action serves only to accentuate gaping holes in the plot. But these are minor complaints; Pickard's novel is, in its quiet fashion, an appealing novelty at the intersection of truth and fiction. --Kelly Flynn --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

In a sensational change of pace, Anthony Award-winner Pickard sets aside her Jenny Cain series (Twilight, Confession, etc.) for a fast-moving thriller that literally starts with a bang. True-crime writer Marie Lightfoot is covering the murder trial of Raymond Raintree, accused of kidnapping and killing, and extracting the pineal gland of, a six-year-old girl in Maria's hometown of Bahia Beach, Fla. When convicted, Raintree charges the judge, who whips out a pistol and shoots him. Feigning unconsciousness, Raintree manages to escape. The story then seamlessly alternates between Marie's narration of the manhunt for Raintree and chapters of Marie's book, The Little Mermaid, about the background to the trial. Raintree is a cipher, a seemingly illiterate but clever outcast with no past. Pickard delves deeply into the personality and psyche of this repellent yet sympathetic monster who was kidnapped and abused as a child. After finding and arresting the fugitive, the police never question the anomalies in the case (how could an uneducated man perform a delicate surgical procedure?) nor do they respond to calls from a retired Kansas sheriff who believes Raintree is John Kepler, who was kidnapped 22 years ago. Because of her fame, Marie is contacted by Kepler's parents, and the course of the novel shifts dramatically as Marie becomes personally involved. Mrs. Kepler's wish to see her son again spurs the frightening climax to this stunning synthesis of psychological suspense and commentary on our culture of celebrity. Featured alternate of the Mystery Guild; 9-city author tour. (Mar.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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The courthouse in downtown Bahia Beach, Florida, seems a pale, cool place to hold the evidence of so much passion. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews
1.0 out of 5 stars Tired prose, weak plot, even weaker characters Dec 4 2003
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
Ms. Pickard made her name in the light-weight, fluffy detective world of the ever-perky, tart-tongued female detective. Men also creep into this odious offal of a mystery category. In this novel Ms. Pickard pulls her perky detective from the scene and tries to bring some grit and grunge into her writing. Doesn't work. Say it again: Doesn't work. She lionizes rich people in Ft. Lauderdale, shows insufficient understanding of a mentally retarded young man. A grimy salesman from the wrong side of the tracks is invidiously belittled. You have to smell nice to be nice in Pickard's world. I read the entire book and was rewarded with one of the grossest images ever present in a novel. Still didn't do anything for the novel. Also, the black prosecutor's romance with the white reporter was sooo P.C. Why not a Cuban and an American white woman. Not P.C. Simply awful book.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Bring back Jenny Cain! Dec 31 2002
Format:Hardcover
As a longtime fan of Pickard's Jenny Cain books, and having been impressed by the Pickard short stories I've read in different anthologies, I was prepared to be impressed by this book--especially considering the raves it has received. In fact, I had to force myself to finish the book.

The main character doesn't have any of the appeal or complexity of Jenny Cain, Pickard's previous series heroine; after spending a whole book with Marie Lightfoot, I felt that she had never really come to life or engaged my interest or sympathy. The chapters from "her" book interspersed with the mystery are flat, shallow, and disappointing as they reduce the potentially intriguing story to conventional, even cliched phrases and flat characterizations. That the chapters from Lightfoot's book are so uninspired makes me less sympathetic to her as a character, and all the more skeptical that everyone else in the book recognizes her as a literary phenomenon.

Perhaps the series will improve, but I'm in no hurry to continue reading. I miss the humor, self-awareness, and spunkiness of Jenny Cain and her supporting characters; this book and heroine rate little more than a disappointed sigh--or yawn.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Thought Provoking May 12 2002
Format:Mass Market Paperback
Nancy Pickard has found an ingenious device, making her series protagonist Marie Lightfoot a true crime author. She presents us with a story within a story. Chapters from her tale "Little Mermaid" are interwoven with her non-publishable thoughts and actions about the murder of a little girl by Raymond Raintree.

Raymond, a curiously young appearing man and perhaps mentally deficient, has confessed. The prosecution has him dead to rights with hard, incontrovertible evidence. The most expensive law firm in the area vigorously defends him. Can there be any doubts? Well, yes. The reader senses something is wrong. Raymond has no motive, no past, and no present. It is as if Raymond has been dropped out of the sky to go on trial for murder. Who is paying for his defense? Sometimes he is totally withdrawn, other times voluble and fantastical about his past and reality. Is he lying? Does he truly not remember anything of his childhood?

Ms. Pickard does an excellent job of keeping the story taut and forward moving. She is dealing with many characters, and they are shot with reality. The ending is a fine, satisfying climax. The introduction of the protagonist's missing parents is a mistake; it never goes anywhere and just distracts from the story. But that is a small complaint. Because of the child victim, the story could be painful for some people to read, and the violence is graphic. However, I think most readers will find this intriguing mystery poignant and sad.

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Most recent customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars This new series for Nancy Pickard is a real winner!!!!
I have read and enjoyed Nancy Pickard's Jenny Cain novels for many years but this new series is really fabulous. Read more
Published on Nov 29 2001 by Silver Springer
5.0 out of 5 stars excellent
As usual Nancy Pickard had written another wonderful book. She has written a story about a women who is a true crime writer & what she finds out about the case that she is... Read more
Published on Sep 18 2001
5.0 out of 5 stars An Awesome Accomplishment
As a mystery writer with my first novel in current release, I greatly admire any novel that successfully breaks with the established patterns of American crime fiction. Read more
Published on July 19 2001 by Kent Braithwaite
4.0 out of 5 stars Fictional true crime is not a contradiction
I used to laugh at lists of mystery books that were divided by the occupation of the protagonist. Cop, PI, amateur - what did it matter? Read more
Published on Jun 29 2001 by Carol Peterson Hennekens
4.0 out of 5 stars first time reading Nancy Pickard
I liked this book and disagree with all the people that were disappointed in the ending. I feel like the ending was not only a total surprise(I never had a clue)but that the... Read more
Published on May 31 2001 by lusty22
5.0 out of 5 stars A First Time Reader
I too am a first time reader of author Nancy Pickard and I did not know just what to expect. Bottom line.. Read more
Published on April 22 2001 by Susan L. Duncan
4.0 out of 5 stars Gratifying surprise
I have never read Nancy Pickard before--or even heard of her--but found The Whole Truth a gratifying surprise. Read more
Published on Feb 27 2001
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating
As a long time fan of Pickard's work, I found The Whole Truth to be a dramatic page turner. The characters are smoothly drawn, the story is intriguing, and I can't wait to see... Read more
Published on Jan 30 2001
4.0 out of 5 stars The Best Yet
Ms. Pickard is an excellent storyteller. I have enjoyed all of her Jenny Cain mysteries. This story, however, tops anything she's ever written. Read more
Published on Oct 2 2000 by N. Sausser
2.0 out of 5 stars Didn't live up to its promise
I really agree with an earlier reviewer who said the ending was disappointing. The author drew me in, got me involved in the whole, mixed up, sad story of Ray Raintree and his... Read more
Published on Oct 2 2000
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