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Midnight Rambler

A Novel of Suspense

#1 in series

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
Explosive. Pulse-pounding. Heart-racing. From the bestselling author The Wall Street Journal hails as “one terrific writer,” Midnight Rambler is the breakout thriller of the year–a brawny, brainy novel of suspense that pairs James Swain’s trademark smooth-as-silk prose with a plot bigger and bolder than anything he’s done before.
In South Florida, Jack Carpenter is infamous. He’s the cop who busted the notorious serial killer Simon Skell–aka the Midnight Rambler–and sacrificed his badge and marriage in the process. Haunted by the Skell case, Carpenter now works as an abduction specialist in Fort Lauderdale, reuniting families with their missing children.
But the body of one of the Midnight Rambler’s victims has just been uncovered–and forensic evidence suggests Carpenter jailed the wrong man. With Skell just days away from release, the tarnished hero must reopen the case that shattered his life and the lives of eight murdered women.
As waves of heat and rain wash over the steamy streets, Carpenter races against the clock to reaffirm the case against Skell. Yet the deeper he digs, the more he starts to realize that Skell is just one piece in a terrifying puzzle of predation and murder, just one player in a shocking conspiracy that ranges across the state of Florida. And as the relentless Carpenter draws the net tighter, his enemies prepare to spring a devastating final surprise.
From the seaside bar that Jack Carpenter calls home to the glittering tourist kingdom in Orlando to the funky jungle of Coconut Grove, James Swain unleashes a wild ride into the heart of evil–with the Rolling Stones’ “Midnight Rambler” as the throbbing, terrifying soundtrack.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 6, 2007
      Swain, author of the gambling crime series starring Tony Valentine (Grift Sense
      , etc.), avoids many of the clichés of the antisocial ex-cop novel in this chilling stand-alone. A specialist in finding missing children, former cop Jack Carpenter was fired from the force for assaulting a prisoner. Broke after a civil lawsuit and estranged from his wife and daughter, he's living in a seedy beachside apartment north of Miami, Fla., with his dog. Then Simon Skell (aka the “Midnight Rambler”), whom Carpenter helped convict for murdering prostitutes, is released from prison on a technicality. Determined to prove Skell guilty, Carpenter is frozen out by the cop on the case, but help comes from an FBI agent whose daughter vanished years earlier. The tension rises as the investigation widens far beyond Skell. Well-defined characters and intricately woven subplots, one involving a nail-biting scene at Disney World, make this a page-turner. 12-city author tour.

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from September 15, 2007
      Jack Carpenter is down and nearly out, a 40-year-old cop who left the Broward County (FL) Missing Persons Unit, his career and personal life in ruins, after he beat up Simon Skell, an accused serial killer known as the Midnight Rambler. When Skell is suddenly released from prison, Carpenter finds himself being framed as the Rambler. With some help from a former colleague and an FBI agent, plus lots of renegade activity, Carpenter obsessively pursues Skell, even as the public increasingly vilifies Carpenter as responsible for a new series of abductions of children and murders of young women. Solving the cases appears to exonerate Carpenter, but at least one villain remains at the end, perhaps to reappear. This is a breakout novel for Swain, well known for his Tony Valentine mysteries involving the world of gambling (e.g., "Mr. Lucky"). Swain knows his native Florida, he knows cops and missing-persons work, and he knows how to write. The plot is complex, the characters vividly drawn, and the action gripping. Highly recommended for popular fiction collections.Roland Person, Southern Illinois Univ. Lib., Carbondale

      Copyright 2007 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      September 15, 2007
      Once the respected head of Missing Persons for the Ft. Lauderdale Police Department, Jack Carpenter finds his life in tatters. He resigned under pressure from the PD because of allegations that he used excessive force in capturing Simon Skell, the Midnight Rambler, a notorious serial killer. Jacks wife has left him, and hes sinking in debt.He lives above a seedy bar, picking up erratic paydays helping other Florida cops recover missing children. When new forensic evidence suggests that Skell is innocent, Jack is forced to return to the haunting case that cost eight young women their lives and wrecked his. Some of the plot devices seem strainedfor example, a radio shock jock who manipulates live interviews via his stations time delay to brand Jack as a monsterand Swain doesnt spend enough time fleshing out his large cast of characters. The author of the quirky Tony Valentine series, Swain may be more at home with lighter, quasi-comic crime novels, but here he tries for a high-octane thriller. Not bad but not quite hitting on all cylinders, either.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2007, American Library Association.)

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