Dearly Devoted Dexter
Dearly Devoted Dexter book cover

Dearly Devoted Dexter

Price
$14.68
Format
Paperback
Pages
292
Publisher
Vintage Crime/Black Lizard
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1400095926
Dimensions
5.3 x 0.6 x 8 inches
Weight
8.2 ounces

Description

“A macabre work of art.” – The Miami Herald “The first serial killer who unabashedly solicits our love.” – Entertainment Weekly “Morbidly funny.”–Marilyn Stasio, The New York Times Book Review “Creepily over the top. . . Snappier than ever.”– The Oregonian “Like a breath of fresh air blowing across all of crime-novel conventions, there is Dexter.”– The Denver PostDearly Devoted Dexter is fascinating, entertaining, and brilliant. Let Jeff Lindsay introduce you to the serial killer next door—Dexter (and his Dark Passenger) are the freshest, most terrifying creations you are ever likely to meet . . . and live to tell about.”— New York Times bestselling author Robert CraisPraise for award-winning Darkly Dreaming Dexter: “A dark and devious novel about Dexter Morgan, the serial killer with a heart . . . Lindsay’s tale is daring and unexpectedly comedic.”— USA Today “A macabre tour de force . . . so snappy and smart.”— The New York Times “It’s [the] human touches, including self-pity, that make Dexter come to life and Lindsay’s book so enjoyable.”— Chicago Tribune Fascinating, entertaining, and brilliant.”—Robert Crais He's a charming monster . . . A macabre hero . . . A serial killer "who only kills bad people Dexter Morgan has been under considerable pressure. It's just not easy being an ethical serial killer--especially while trying to avoid the unshakable suspicions of the dangerous Sergeant Doakes (who believes Dexter is a homicidal maniac . . . which, of course, he is). In an attempt to throw Doakes off his trail, Dexter has had to slip deep into his foolproof disguise. While not working as a blood-spatter analyst for the Miami Police Department, he now spends nearly all his time with his cheerful girlfriend, Rita, and her two children, sipping light beer and slowly becoming the world's first serial couch potato. But how long can Dexter play Kick the Can instead of Slice the Slasher? How long before his Dark Passenger forces him to drop the charade and let his inner monster run free?In trying times, opportunity knocks. A particularly nasty psychopath is cutting a trail through Miami--a man whose twisted technique leaves even Dexter speechless. As Dexter's dark appetite is revived, his sister, Deborah (a newly minted, tough-as-nails Miami detective) is drawn headlong into the case. It quickly becomes clear that it will take a monster to catch a monster--but it isn't until his archnemesis is abducted that Dex can finally throw himself into the search for a new plaything. Unless, of course, his plaything finds him first . . . With the incredible wit and freshness that drew widespread acclaim to "Darkly Dreaming Dexter, Jeff Lindsay now takes Dexter Morgan to a new level of macabre appeal and gives us one of the most original, colorful narrators in years." JEFF LINDSAY is the author of Darkly Dreaming Dexter . He lives in South Florida with his wife and three daughters. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 1It’s that moon again, slung so fat and low in the tropical night, calling out across a curdled sky and into the quivering ears of that dear old voice in the shadows, the Dark Passenger, nestled snug in the backseat of the Dodge K-car of Dexter’s hypothetical soul.That rascal moon, that loudmouthed leering Lucifer, calling down across the empty sky to the dark hearts of the night monsters below, calling them away to their joyful playgrounds. Calling, in fact, to that monster right there, behind the oleander, tiger-striped with moonlight through the leaves, his senses all on high as he waits for just the right moment to leap from the shadows. It is Dexter in the dark, listening to the terrible whispered suggestions that come pouring down breathlessly into my shadowed hiding place.My dear dark other self urges me to pounce–now–sink my moonlit fangs into the oh-so-vulnerable flesh on the far side of the hedge. But the time is not right and so I wait, watching cautiously as my unsuspecting victim creeps past, eyes wide, knowing that something is watching but not knowing that I am here , only three steely feet away in the hedge. I could so easily slide out like the knife blade I am, and work my wonderful magic–but I wait, suspected but unseen.One long stealthy moment tiptoes into another and still I wait for just the right time; the leap, the outstretched hand, the cold glee as I see the terror spread across the face of my victim–But no. Something is not right.And now it is Dexter’s turn to feel the queasy prickling of eyes on his back, the flutter of fear as I become more certain that something is now hunting me . Some other night stalker is feeling the sharp interior drool as he watches me from somewhere nearby–and I do not like this thought.And like a small clap of thunder the gleeful hand comes down out of nowhere and onto me blindingly fast, and I glimpse the gleaming teeth of a nine-year-old neighbor boy. “Gotcha! One, two, three on Dexter!” And with the savage speed of the very young the rest of them are there, giggling wildly and shouting at me as I stand in the bushes humiliated. It is over. Six-year-old Cody stares at me, disappointed, as though Dexter the Night God has let down his high priest. Astor, his nine-year-old sister, joins in the hooting of the kids before they skitter off into the dark once more, to new and more complicated hiding places, leaving me so very alone in my shame.Dexter did not kick the can. And now Dexter is It . Again.You may wonder, how can this be? How can Dexter’s night hunt be reduced to this? Always before there has been some frightful twisted predator awaiting the special attention of frightful twisted Dexter–and here I am, stalking an empty Chef Boyardee ravioli can that is guilty of nothing worse than bland sauce. Here I am, frittering away precious time losing a game I have not played since I was ten. Even worse, I am IT.“One. Two. Three–” I call out, ever the fair and honest gamesman.How can this be? How can Dexter the Demon feel the weight of that moon and not be off among the entrails, slicing the life from someone who needs very badly to feel the edge of Dexter’s keen judgment? How is it possible on this kind of night for the Cold Avenger to refuse to take the Dark Passenger out for a spin?“Four. Five. Six.”Harry, my wise foster father, had taught me the careful balance of Need and Knife. He had taken a boy in whom he saw the unstoppable need to kill–no changing that–and Harry had molded him into a man who only killed the killers; Dexter the no-bloodhound, who hid behind a human-seeming face and tracked down the truly naughty serial killers who killed without code. And I would have been one of them, if not for the Harry Plan. There are plenty of people who deserve it, Dexter , my wonderful foster-cop-father had said.“Seven. Eight. Nine.”He had taught me how to find these special playmates, how to be sure they deserved a social call from me and my Dark Passenger. And even better, he taught me how to getaway with it, as only a cop could teach. He had helped me to build a plausible hidey-hole of a life, and drummed into me that I must fit in, always, be relentlessly normal in all things.And so I had learned how to dress neatly and smile and brush my teeth. I had become a perfect fake human, saying the stupid and pointless things that humans say to each other all day long. No one suspected what crouched behind my perfect imitation smile. No one except my foster sister, Deborah, of course, but she was coming to accept the real me. After all, I could have been much worse. I could have been a vicious raving monster who killed and killed and left towers of rotting flesh in my wake. Instead, here I was on the side of truth, justice, and the American way. Still a monster, of course, but I cleaned up nicely afterward, and I was OUR monster, dressed in red, white, and blue 100 percent synthetic virtue. And on those nights when the moon is loudest I find the others, those who prey on the innocent and do not play by the rules, and I make them go away in small, carefully wrapped pieces.This elegant formula had worked well through years of happy inhumanity. In between playdates I maintained my perfectly average lifestyle from a persistently ordinary apartment. I was never late to work, I made the right jokes with coworkers, and I was useful and unobtrusive in all things, just as Harry had taught me. My life as an android was neat, balanced, and had real redeeming social value.Until now. Somehow, here I was on a just-right night playing kick the can with a flock of children, instead of playing Slice the Slasher with a carefully chosen friend. And in a little while, when the game was over, I would take Cody and Astor into their mother, Rita’s, house, and she would bring me a can of beer, tuck the kids into bed, and sit beside me on the couch.How could this be? Was the Dark Passenger slipping into early retirement? Had Dexter mellowed? Had I somehow turned the corner of the long dark hall and come out on the wrong end as Dexter Domestic? Would I ever again place that one drop of blood on the neat glass slide, as I always did–my trophy from the hunt?“Ten! Ready or not, here I come!”Yes, indeed. Here I came.But to what?It started, of course, with Sergeant Doakes. Every superhero must have an archenemy, and he was mine. I had done absolutely nothing to him, and yet he had chosen to hound me, harry me from my good work. Me and my shadow. And the irony of it: me, a hardworking blood-spatter-pattern analyst for the very same police force that employed him–we were on the same team. Was it fair for him to pursue me like this, merely because every now and then I did a little bit of moonlighting?I knew Sergeant Doakes far better than I really wanted to, much more than just from our professional connection. I had made it my business to find out about him for one simple reason: he had never liked me, in spite of the fact that I take great pride in being charming and cheerful on a world-class level. But it almost seemed like Doakes could tell it was all fake; all my handmade heartiness bounced off him like June bugs off a windshield.This naturally made me curious. I mean, really; what kind of person could possibly dislike me? And so I had studied him just a little, and I found out. The kind of person who could possibly dislike Debonair Dexter was forty-eight, African American, and held the department’s record for the bench press. According to the casual gossip I had picked up, he was an army vet, and since coming to the department had been involved in several fatal shootings, all of which Internal Affairs had judged to be righteous.But more important than all this, I had discovered firsthand that somewhere behind the deep anger that always burned in his eyes there lurked an echo of a chuckle from my own Dark Passenger. It was just a tiny little chime of a very small bell, but I was sure. Doakes was sharing space with something, just like I was. Not the same thing, but something very similar, a panther to my tiger. Doakes was a cop, but he was also a cold killer. I had no real proof of this, but I was as sure as I could be without seeing him crush a jaywalker’s larynx.A reasonable being might think that he and I could find some common ground; have a cup of coffee and compare our Passengers, exchange trade talk and chitchat about dismemberment techniques. But no: Doakes wanted me dead. And I found it difficult to share his point of view.Doakes had been working with Detective LaGuerta at the time of her somewhat suspicious death, and since then his feelings toward me had grown to be a bit more active than simple loathing. Doakes was convinced that I’d had something to do with LaGuerta’s death. This was totally untrue and completely unfair. All I had done was watch–where’s the harm in that? Of course I had helped the real killer escape, but what could you expect? What kind of person would turn in his own brother? Especially when he did such neat work.Well, live and let live, I always say. Or quite often, anyway. Sergeant Doakes could think what he wanted to think, and that was fine with me. There are still very few laws against thinking, although I’m sure they’re working hard on that in Washington. No, whatever suspicions the good sergeant had about me, he was welcome to them. But now that he had decided to act on his impure thoughts my life was a shambles. Dexter Derailed was fast becoming Dexter Demented.And why? How had this whole nasty mess begun? All I had done was try to be myself. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • NATIONAL BESTSELLER
  • • Life’s tough for Dexter Morgan. It’s not easy being the world’s only serial killer with a conscience, especially when you work for the Miami police. •
  • The Killer Character That Inspired the Hit Showtime Series
  • Dexter
  • To avoid suspicion, Dexter’s had to slip deep into his disguise: spending time with his girlfriend and her kids, slowly becoming the world’s first serial killing couch potato.
  • Then a particularly nasty psychopath starts cutting a trail through Miami — a killer whose twisted techniques leave even Dexter speechless. When his sister Deborah, a tough-as-nails cop, is drawn into the case, it becomes clear that Dexter will have to do come out of hiding and hunt the monster down. Unless, of course, the killer finds him first. . .

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(1.4K)
★★★★
25%
(577)
★★★
15%
(346)
★★
7%
(161)
-7%
(-161)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Maturing, or lack thereof

I began reading Dearly Devoted Dexter wanting to like it, and I will admit in some bits I did. That said though, while Darkly Dreaming Dexter wasn't a great book, it at least was entertaining- but see, that's where it stopped for me.

In this book, we see Dexter with Doakes stalking him, which means Dexter can't go back to doing his night work anymore. That said, to kill his worries about Doakes finding out who he truly is, he has to resort to spending every night with Rita. This results in developing an unhealthy addiction to BEER, which Lindsay spends two entire pages talking about. Deborah is still her hard-as-nails self, badmouthing Dexy when she has the chance, so as you may expect, nothing has changed here. Ah, Dexy is going to be living the dream, right?

WRONG.

So there's a new killer this time, except he doesn't leave the limbs bloodless, like the first book. His name is Dr. Danco. This means Dexy must stop acting like a freaking kid like he always does and get down on business.

Darkly Dreaming Dexter, while not great, was decent. I will admit I was expecting to hate it, and actually liked it. That said though, it was extremely repetitive and SLOOOOOWWW. And believe it or not, even slower than the TV show! I'll admit I got into the Dexter world through the series. All three seasons were spectacular and equally awesome, even though S3 didn't feel the same without the use of the infamous "Blood Theme".

Speaking of which, The Blood Theme began playing after I finished reading the book, and I don't mean that in a good right. In a sad way, actually. The book moves at a VERY slow pace, even slower than the first book. And yes, it's just as, if even MORE repetitive than the first book. I was willing to put up with the repetitiveness of the third book, since the story was entertaining and interesting. The story in this one, however, isn't.

There's too much whining and complaining about Dexy's feelinglessness too. Yeah, Dexy, you're practically a killing machine with little to no emotion. WE GOT IT IN THE LAST BOOK. Rita is a freaking annoying character. I don't even know why ANYONE would date her. She wallows too much in her self pity and always has NO backbone. I mean, she has two cute little kids, and a charming and handsome boyfriend, and she COMPLAINS????? I get it, you were abused by your ex husband. That, however, is no excuse for your lack of a backbone. I've seen that Oprah episode where those abused women went on this retreat, and even before going on that retreat they didn't act as half as ridiculous as Rita.

After reading the book, I wanted to contact Jeff Lindsay and organize an interview {preferably face to face!) so I could ask him what the hell he was thinking when he made Dexter an immature and insecure character!!!! As for the change in tone, I don't mind it. I mean, blood and gore is something I love. I don't have a problem with it.

Fortunately this book does have some creepy bits that are atmospheric and pretty cool. The chemistry between the title character and Doakes was excellent. And the finale made my purchase worth the $15 I spent. But that said, I'm not liking where the series is going. And it only gets worse in the next book, Dexter in the Dark.
4 people found this helpful
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Anti-climatic Dexter

Dexter presented a clever plot that dragged along the way and had several aspects that didn't quite make sense. Like why would they allow a co-worker from the Police Department in effect stalk another employee during non-work hours. Sgt. Doakes did this and Dexter blithely allowed it to happen when he had a simple solution. And the ending was quite anti-climatic with the murderous villian, Dr. Danco - well, I won't spoil it by revealing it except to say, (shrugs)... Good work, but not overwhelmed and in places, bored.
3 people found this helpful
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Dark and devilishly devious

This is a fantastic follow-up novel about everyone's favorite serial killer. The book plunges deeper into Dexter's mind while racing about Miami in pursuit of "Dr. Danco," a shockingly cruel master of torture from Sgt. Doakes' shadowy Army days. This novel grabbed me by the throat and wouldn't let go. I finished it in three days, only stopping to sleep, eat and go to work. I couldn't put it down. I actually enjoyed this better than the first book, which was great in its own right. "Dearly Devoted" was more fast-paced and exciting. Dexter's humor, his narration, is priceless. His interactions with Vince Masouka, his total bewilderment at Rita's advances, his constant internal dialogue with the reader and his Dark Passenger, are hilarious. This is dark comedy at its best. What I love the most about Dexter is...and he endlessly refuses to admit it...he DOES have a heart, and he DOES have emotions and feelings. Harry (Dex's foster father) instilled goodness in him decades ago through his careful guidance and nurturing. Dexter just buries it so deep in his traumatic past and refuses to acknowledge it...but we can all see it's there. He's like Batman in a bowling shirt...fighting for Truth and Justice by nurturing his need to kill by getting rid of the scum of the earth. Lindsey is such a talented writer!
3 people found this helpful
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Dexter the Family Guy

Poor Dexter. All he wants to do is chop up a pedophile who has a taste for killing young boys and the whole world is scheming to keep him from his one true love... killing. The problem starts with Sergeant Doakes, a fellow officer in the Miami Police Department. Doakes has looked into Dexter's soul and has seen something he didn't like so he has been following poor Dexter everywhere. So Dexter has been hanging around with his girlfriend Rita, drinking beer on her couch, and playing hangman with Rita's kids.

Meanwhile, a new monster has decided to settle into Miami and Dexter's sister is dragging Dexter into another case. This new monster's crimes are so horrific that even Dexter is enthralled with them. But being dragged around to help Deborah's new boyfriend crack this case isn't exactly Dexter's idea of fun. And off we go on another adventure with the only likable serial killer in the world.

Once again we find ourselves rooting for the serial killer and once again Jeff Lindsay has written a fast-paced, fun, and funny (unless you get nightmares easily) book. Just as in the first book, the second in the series is written in the first person which lets us pal around with Dexter and become part of his inner thoughts. And his inner thoughts are quite humorous. Dexter knows he isn't quite human which leaves him sometimes guessing about the things that humans actually think and mean when they speak. For example, the idea that the female police officer who stammers and blushes everytime she sees him has a crush on him simply never enters his mind. He simply can't understand why anyone could love a monster like him.

The best parts of the book are all things that I won't tell you because I don't want to ruin the fun. Let's just say that poor Dexter gets a lot more put upon then he ever wanted. And although I hate to use cliches too much, this book is really laugh-out-loud funny (just ask my daughter who was in the back seat while we waited for my wife to come out of the store) and a page-turner. I had to pick this book up and keep reading at every opportunity. Is this book perfect? No, there are a few holes in the story here and there but the story moves so quickly they are hard to notice. I can't wait for the next book in the series.
3 people found this helpful
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Dexter: Choose Life

Even more so than "Darkly Dreaming Dexter", "Dearly Devoted Dexter" gives the reader more insight into Dexter Morgan's fascinating personality. Pursuing a different "killer" (this slasher leaves his victims barely alive) than in the first novel, Dexter reluctantly teams up with Doakes to catch the perpetrator before more victims fall prey to his surgical precision. As if Dexter's life isn't complicated enough, he somehow inadvertently ends up engaged to Rita in one of the most delightfully morbid and hilarious scenes in the book (I won't spoil it for you, though). Rife with Dexter's edgy, oft-misunderstood sense of humor, this book is another worthy addition to your Dexter collection.
2 people found this helpful
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Great Character, Awful Crime Novel

Let me be clear, without Dexter Morgan, this book would have been thrown in the trash next to the editors desk.

I Enjoy the Showtime program, and I also enjoyed the first book, but this one is weak. Dexter Morgan is the only reason to pick up this novel. He is still the same, impossible to love (he chops people into neat little pieces) and impossible to hate (the people he chops up are murderers, just like him) character he was before. Do NOT read the cover for a teaser synopsis. It implies that there is a cat and mouse game like there was with Dex and the Ice Truck killer, there isn't. Dexter is chasing the new guy, Dr Danco, while the Doctor is only vaguely aware of Dex's existence.

The police work in this novel is over the top bad. We are talking the police work as seen on scooby doo. That is what made the novel so frustrating. When you read it you will see what I mean.

A brief summary is as follows: There is a guy who is "almost" killing people, they would rather be dead when Danco is done with them, and this crazy doctor has a connection to Doakes and one of Doakes's old pals fromhis army days. In this tale Dexter is roped into finding the killer for his sister, when he would rather be off hunting pedophiles. Dex is unable to continue his favorite pass time because Doakes blames him for LaGuertas death in the first book. Doakes is following Dex everywhere (just like he does in season two on showtime)and Dex sees hunting Danco as a way to get Doakes off his back.

However, that being said, I will still read the third novel, as I can only hope Lindsay got some critical reviews and put together a more satisfying piece of work.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Great Character, Awful Crime Novel

Let me be clear, without Dexter Morgan, this book would have been thrown in the trash next to the editors desk.

I Enjoy the Showtime program, and I also enjoyed the first book, but this one is weak. Dexter Morgan is the only reason to pick up this novel. He is still the same, impossible to love (he chops people into neat little pieces) and impossible to hate (the people he chops up are murderers, just like him) character he was before. Do NOT read the cover for a teaser synopsis. It implies that there is a cat and mouse game like there was with Dex and the Ice Truck killer, there isn't. Dexter is chasing the new guy, Dr Danco, while the Doctor is only vaguely aware of Dex's existence.

The police work in this novel is over the top bad. We are talking the police work as seen on scooby doo. That is what made the novel so frustrating. When you read it you will see what I mean.

A brief summary is as follows: There is a guy who is "almost" killing people, they would rather be dead when Danco is done with them, and this crazy doctor has a connection to Doakes and one of Doakes's old pals fromhis army days. In this tale Dexter is roped into finding the killer for his sister, when he would rather be off hunting pedophiles. Dex is unable to continue his favorite pass time because Doakes blames him for LaGuertas death in the first book. Doakes is following Dex everywhere (just like he does in season two on showtime)and Dex sees hunting Danco as a way to get Doakes off his back.

However, that being said, I will still read the third novel, as I can only hope Lindsay got some critical reviews and put together a more satisfying piece of work.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Great Character, Awful Crime Novel

Let me be clear, without Dexter Morgan, this book would have been thrown in the trash next to the editors desk.

I Enjoy the Showtime program, and I also enjoyed the first book, but this one is weak. Dexter Morgan is the only reason to pick up this novel. He is still the same, impossible to love (he chops people into neat little pieces) and impossible to hate (the people he chops up are murderers, just like him) character he was before. Do NOT read the cover for a teaser synopsis. It implies that there is a cat and mouse game like there was with Dex and the Ice Truck killer, there isn't. Dexter is chasing the new guy, Dr Danco, while the Doctor is only vaguely aware of Dex's existence.

The police work in this novel is over the top bad. We are talking the police work as seen on scooby doo. That is what made the novel so frustrating. When you read it you will see what I mean.

A brief summary is as follows: There is a guy who is "almost" killing people, they would rather be dead when Danco is done with them, and this crazy doctor has a connection to Doakes and one of Doakes's old pals fromhis army days. In this tale Dexter is roped into finding the killer for his sister, when he would rather be off hunting pedophiles. Dex is unable to continue his favorite pass time because Doakes blames him for LaGuertas death in the first book. Doakes is following Dex everywhere (just like he does in season two on showtime)and Dex sees hunting Danco as a way to get Doakes off his back.

However, that being said, I will still read the third novel, as I can only hope Lindsay got some critical reviews and put together a more satisfying piece of work.
2 people found this helpful
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DARLING DEVILISH DEXTER...

With Dexter Morgan, the author has created one of the most memorable characters around. Moreover, he has managed to make the reader really like Dexter, no mean feat, given the fact that Dexter is a serial killer, albeit one who only offs bad people.

With this sequel to "Darkly Dreaming Dexter", the author continues Dexter's saga. Still working as a blood splatter expert for the Miami police department, Dexter is spending quite a bit of time with his girlfriend, Rita, and her two kids. He is simply trying to fit in as best he can, knowing his own inner demons. Meanwhile, his nemesis, Sergeant Doakes, continues to hound Dexter, engaging in a cat and mouse game that effectively curtails Dexter from exercising his secret vocation.

Opportunity knocks when a crazed psychopath begins kidnapping and hideously mutilating people in an unimaginable way. Dexter's sister Deborah finds herself connected to the case, and Dexter finds himself intrigued by this cunning psychopath whose technique is so fiendish as to leave even Dexter breathless. Inadvertently, this psychopath will end up doing Dexter a solid.

Written with sly humor, I enjoyed this second Dexter book even more than the first. With a fascinating plot, an ingenious psychopath that is terrorizing Miami, and some more insight into what makes Dexter tick, I am totally hooked on this fictional character.
2 people found this helpful
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"WOW"

Dexter is a serial killer who only kills bad people
Morgan has been under considerable pressure. It's just not easy being an ethical serial killer--especially while trying to avoid the unshakable suspicions of the dangerous Sergeant Doakes (who believes Dexter is a homicidal maniac . . . which, of course, he is). In an attempt to throw Doakes off his trail, Dexter has had to slip deep into his foolproof disguise. While not working as a blood-spatter analyst for the Miami Police Department, he now spends nearly all his time with his cheerful girlfriend, Rita, and her two children, sipping light beer and slowly becoming the world's first serial couch potato. But how long can Dexter play Kick the Can instead of Slice the Slasher? How long before his Dark Passenger forces him to drop the charade and let his inner monster run free?
In trying times, opportunity knocks. A particularly nasty psychopath is cutting a trail through Miami--a man whose twisted technique leaves even Dexter speechless. As Dexter's dark appetite is revived, his sister, Deborah (a newly minted, tough-as-nails Miami detective) is drawn headlong into the case. It quickly becomes clear that it will take a monster to catch a monster--but it isn't until his archnemesis is abducted that Dex can finally throw himself into the search for a new plaything. Unless, of course, his plaything finds him first . . .
With the incredible wit and freshness that drew widespread acclaim to Darkly Dreaming Dexter, Jeff Lindsay now takes Dexter Morgan to a new level of macabre appeal and gives us one of the most original, colorful narrators in years.
2 people found this helpful