The Silence of the Lambs (Hannibal Lecter)
The Silence of the Lambs (Hannibal Lecter) book cover

The Silence of the Lambs (Hannibal Lecter)

Mass Market Paperback – February 15, 1991

Price
$8.39
Publisher
St. Martin's Paperbacks
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0312924584
Dimensions
4.2 x 0.95 x 6.7 inches
Weight
6.4 ounces

Description

The Silence of the Lambs , by Thomas Harris, is even better than the successful movie. Like his earlier Red Dragon , the book takes us inside the world of professional criminal investigation. All the elements of a well-executed thriller are working here--driving suspense, compelling characters, inside information, publicity-hungry bureaucrats thwarting the search, and the clock ticking relentlessly down toward the death of another young woman. What enriches this well-told tale is the opportunity to live inside the minds of both the crime fighters and the criminals as each struggles in a prison of pain and seeks, sometimes violently, relief. Clarice Starling, a precociously self-disciplined FBI trainee, is dispatched by her boss, Section Chief Jack Crawford, the FBI's most successful tracker of serial killers, to see whether she can learn anything useful from Dr. Hannibal Lecter. Lecter's a gifted psychopath whose nickname is "The Cannibal" because he likes to eat parts of his victims. Isolated by his crimes from all physical contact with the human race, he plays an enigmatic game of "Clue" with Starling, providing her with snippets of data that, if she is smart enough, will lead her to the criminal. Undaunted, she goes where the data takes her. As the tension mounts and the bureaucracy thwarts Starling at every turn, Crawford tells her, "Keep the information and freeze the feelings." Insulted, betrayed, and humiliated, Starling struggles to focus. If she can understand Lecter's final, ambiguous scrawl, she can find the killer. But can she figure it out in time? --Barbara Schlieper “Razor-sharp entertainment, beautifully constructed and brilliantly written. Thrillers don't come any better than this.” ― Clive Barker “A virtual textbook on the craft of suspense, a masterwork of sheer momentum that rockets seamlessly toward its climax... Harris is quite simply the best suspense novelist working today.” ― The Washington Post “A psychological thriller so deftly woven and gripping that a reader can hardly get through one sentence fast enough to discover what's in the next.” ― Associated Press Thomas Harris is the author of best-selling novels including The Silence of the Lambs , Black Sunday, Red Dragon, Hannibal and Hannibal Rising . Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 1 Behavioral Science, the FBI section that deals with serial murder, is on the bottom floor of the Academy building at Quantico, half-buried in the earth. Clarice Starling reached it flushed after a fast walk from Hogan’s Alley on the firing range. She had grass in her hair and grass stains on her FBI Academy windbreaker from diving to the ground under fire in an arrest problem on the range.No one was in the outer office, so she fluffed briefly by her reflection in the glass doors. She knew she could look all right without primping. Her hands smelled of gunsmoke, but there was no time to wash—Section Chief Crawford’s summons had said now. She found Jack Crawford alone in the cluttered suite of offices. He was standing at someone else’s desk talking on the telephone and she had a chance to look him over for the first time in a year. What she saw disturbed her.Normally, Crawford looked like a fit, middle-aged engineer who might have paid his way through college playing baseball—a crafty catcher, tough when he blocked the plate. Now he was thin, his shirt collar was too big, and he had dark puffs under his reddened eyes. Everyone who could read the papers knew Behavioral Science section was catching hell. Starling hoped Crawford wasn’t on the juice. That seemed most unlikely here.Crawford ended his telephone conversation with a sharp “No.” He took her file from under his arm and opened it.“Starling, Clarice M., good morning,” he said.“Hello.” Her smile was only polite.“Nothing’s wrong. I hope the call didn’t spook you.”“No.” Not totally true, Starling thought.“Your instructors tell me you’re doing well, top quarter of the class.”“I hope so, they haven’t posted anything.”“I ask them from time to time.”That surprised Starling; she had written Crawford off as a two-faced recruiting sergeant son of a bitch.She had met Special Agent Crawford when he was a guest lecturer at the University of Virginia. The quality of his criminology seminars was a factor in her coming to the Bureau. She wrote him a note when she qualified for the Academy, but he never replied, and for the three months she had been a trainee at Quantico, he had ignored her.Starling came from people who do not ask for favors or press for friendship, but she was puzzled and regretful at Crawford’s behavior. Now, in his presence, she liked him again, she was sorry to note.Clearly something was wrong with him. There was a peculiar cleverness in Crawford, aside from his intelligence, and Starling had first noticed it in his color sense and the textures of his clothing, even within the FBI-clone standards of agent dress. Now he was neat but drab, as though he were molting.“A job came up and I thought about you,” he said. “It’s not really a job, it’s more of an interesting errand. Push Berry’s stuff off that chair and sit down. You put down here that you want to come directly to Behavioral Science when you get through with the Academy.”“I do.”“You have a lot of forensics, but no law enforcement background. We look for six years, minimum.”“My father was a marshal, I know the life.”Crawford smiled a little. “What you do have is a double major in psychology and criminology, and how many summers working in a mental health center—two?”“Two.”“Your counselor’s license, is it current?”“It’s good for two more years. I got it before you had the seminar at UVA—before I decided to do this.”“You got stuck in the hiring freeze.”Starling nodded. “I was lucky though—I found out in time to qualify as a Forensic Fellow. Then I could work in the lab until the Academy had an opening.”“You wrote to me about coming here, didn’t you, and I don’t think I answered—I know I didn’t. I should have.”“You’ve had plenty else to do.”“Do you know about VI-CAP?”“I know it’s the Violent Criminal Apprehension Program. The Law Enforcement Bulletin says you’re working on a database, but you aren’t operational yet.”Crawford nodded. “We’ve developed a questionnaire. It applies to all the known serial murderers in modern times.” He handed her a thick sheaf of papers in a flimsy binding. “There’s a section for investigators, and one for surviving victims, if any. The blue is for the killer to answer if he will, and the pink is a series of questions an examiner asks the killer, getting his reactions as well as his answers. It’s a lot of paperwork.”Paperwork. Clarice Starling’s self-interest snuffled ahead like a keen beagle. She smelled a job offer coming—probably the drudgery of feeding raw data into a new computer system. It was tempting to get into Behavioral Science in any capacity she could, but she knew what happens to a woman if she’s ever pegged as a secretary—it sticks until the end of time. A choice was coming, and she wanted to choose well.Crawford was waiting for something—he must have asked her a question. Starling had to scramble to recall it:“What tests have you given? Minnesota Multiphasic, ever? Rorschach?”“Yes, MMPI, never Rorschach,” she said. “I’ve done Thematic Apperception and I’ve given children Bender-Gestalt.”“Do you spook easily, Starling?”“Not yet.”“See, we’ve tried to interview and examine all the thirty-two known serial murderers we have in custody, to build up a database for psychological profiling in unsolved cases. Most of them went along with it—I think they’re driven to show off, a lot of them. Twenty-seven were willing to cooperate. Four on death row with appeals pending clammed up, understandably. But the one we want the most, we haven’t been able to get. I want you to go after him tomorrow in the asylum.”Clarice Starling felt a glad knocking in her chest and some apprehension too.“Who’s the subject?”“The psychiatrist—Dr. Hannibal Lecter,” Crawford said.A brief silence follows the name, always, in any civilized gathering.Starling looked at Crawford steadily, but she was too still. “Hannibal the Cannibal,” she said.“Yes.”“Yes, well— Okay, right. I’m glad of the chance, but you have to know I’m wondering—why me?”“Mainly because you’re available,” Crawford said. “I don’t expect him to cooperate. He’s already refused, but it was through an intermediary—the director of the hospital. I have to be able to say our qualified examiner went to him and asked him personally. There are reasons that don’t concern you. I don’t have anybody left in this section to do it.”“You’re jammed—Buffalo Bill—and the things in Nevada,” Starling said.“You got it. It’s the old story—not enough warm bodies.”“You said tomorrow—you’re in a hurry. Any bearing on a current case?”“No. I wish there were.”“If he balks on me, do you still want a psychological evaluation?”“No. I’m waist-deep in inaccessible-patient evaluations of Dr. Lecter and they’re all different.”Crawford shook two vitamin C tablets into his palm, and mixed an Alka-Seltzer at the water cooler to wash them down. “It’s ridiculous, you know; Lecter’s a psychiatrist and he writes for the psychiatric journals himself—extraordinary stuff—but it’s never about his own little anomalies. He pretended to go along with the hospital director, Chilton, once in some tests—sitting around with a blood-pressure cuff on his penis, looking at wreck pictures—then Lecter published first what he’d learned about Chilton and made a fool out of him. He responds to serious correspondence from psychiatric students in fields unrelated to his case, and that’s all he does. If he won’t talk to you, I just want straight reporting. How does he look, how does his cell look, what’s he doing. Local color, so to speak. Watch out for the press going in and coming out. Not the real press, the supermarket press. They love Lecter even better than Prince Andrew.”“Didn’t a sleazo magazine offer him fifty thousand dollars for some recipes? I seem to remember that,” Starling said.Crawford nodded. “I’m pretty sure the National Tattler has bought somebody inside the hospital and they may know you’re coming after I make the appointment.”Crawford leaned forward until he faced her at a distance of two feet. She watched his half-glasses blur the bags under his eyes. He had gargled recently with Listerine.“Now. I want your full attention, Starling. Are you listening to me?”“Yes sir.”“Be very careful with Hannibal Lecter. Dr. Chilton, the head of the mental hospital, will go over the physical procedure you use to deal with him. Don’t deviate from it. Do not deviate from it one iota for any reason. If Lecter talks to you at all, he’ll just be trying to find out about you. It’s the kind of curiosity that makes a snake look in a bird’s nest. We both know you have to back-and-forth a little in interviews, but you tell him no specifics about yourself. You don’t want any of your personal facts in his head. You know what he did to Will Graham.”“I read about it when it happened.”“He gutted Will with a linoleum knife when Will caught up with him. It’s a wonder Will didn’t die. Remember the Red Dragon? Lecter turned Francis Dolarhyde onto Will and his family. Will’s face looks like damn Picasso drew him, thanks to Lecter. He tore a nurse up in the asylum. Do your job, just don’t ever forget what he is.”“And what’s that? Do you know?”“I know he’s a monster. Beyond that, nobody can say for sure. Maybe you’ll find out; I didn’t pick you out of a hat, Starling. You asked me a couple of interesting questions when I was at UVA. The Director will see your own report over your signature—if it’s clear and tight and organized. I decide that. And I will have it by 0900 Sunday. Okay, Starling, carry on in the prescribed manner.”Crawford smiled at her, but his eyes were dead.Copyright © 1988 by Yazoo, Inc.Author’s Note © 2013 by Yazoo Fabrications, Inc. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • An ingenious, masterfully written novel, Thomas Harris's
  • The Silence of the Lambs
  • is a classic of suspense and storytelling and the basis for the Oscar award-winning horror film starring Jodie Foster as Clarice Starling and Anthony Hopkins as Dr. Hannibal Lecter.
  • A serial murderer known only by a grotesquely apt nickname―Buffalo Bill―is stalking particular women. He has a purpose, but no one can fathom it, for the bodies are discovered in different states. Clarice Starling, a young trainee at the F.B.I. Academy, is surprised to be summoned by Jack Crawford, Chief of the Bureau's Behavioral Science section. Her assignment: to interview Dr. Hannibal Lecter, a brilliant psychiatrist and grisly killer now kept under close watch in the Baltimore State Hospital for the Criminally Insane. Lecter's insight into the minds of murderers could help track and capture Buffalo Bill.Smart and attractive, Starling is shaken to find herself in a strange, intense relationship with the acutely perceptive Lecter. His cryptic clues―about Buffalo Bill and about
  • her
  • ―launch Clarice on a search that every reader will find startling, harrowing, and totally compelling.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

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Most Helpful Reviews

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So disturbing and suspensful you can't put it down

I saw this movie well over a decade ago, and remebered the gist, but had forgotten much of the story. I recommend to anyone that saw the movie a while ago (and don't mind some graphic descriptions)to read this book. It is enthralling. When a serial killer known as Buffalo Bill begins to kidnap, kill, and skin young women, FBI trainee, Clarice Starling, begins to interview the criminal mind of Hanibal Lecter, a deranged psychiatrist. Lecter offers clues to Starling about the Buffalo Bill case, and Starling becomes heavily involved despite being just a trainee. However, Lecter doesn't share clues for free and she must reveal her past to Lecter in exchange for the information. The investigation becomes a race against time when another young woman is kidnapped. Will Lecter reveal enough clues for Starling to nab Buffalo Bill? You need to read this eerie, sometimes disturbing, and suspensful novel to find out.
8 people found this helpful
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Psychological suspense by which all others are measured

Bar none, Hannibal Lecter is the most compelling and dangerous character I've come across. I read the novel just as the movie was released in the theater, so I already had Anthony Hopkins and Jodie Foster pictured as I was reading it, which worked very well for me. I later saw the movie and it really succeeded in bringing the novel to life. You've probably already seen the movie, but it does miss out on some brilliant dialogue between Clarice and Lecter. An absolute must read for psychological suspense fans!
5 people found this helpful
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Still Rates an All-Nighter After All These Years

Thomas Harris's "The Silence of the Lambs," a bone-chilling thriller, was an immediate hit upon its 1988 publication. Now, nearly twenty years later, most of us inevitably approach, or reapproach, it knowing something about it; with the famous movie based on it firmly in mind. Yet, I, at least, had to fight off the temptation to stay up all night to finish it, although I surely knew where it was going.

Harris, to be sure, writes a great, tense story of suspense. He'd already published "Black Sunday," and "The Red Dragon--" where we were first introduced to Dr. Hannibal Lector. "Lamb's" plot concerns the efforts of the Federal Bureau of Investigations to catch a serial killer nicknamed Buffalo Bill. The agency sends trainee Clarice Starling to interview Dr. Hannibal Lector, former psychiatrist, imprisoned in a Baltimore insane asuylum, after having been found guilty of nine sadistic, cannibalistic murders. Lector has unusual tastes, and intense curiosity about the darker side of the mind. The formerly eminent medical man's understanding of himself, Starling, and the killer forms the core of the book.

"Lambs" benefits from a complex, multi-layered plot. As it proceeds, we realize that Lector knew all along where it had to lead. The author's timing is impeccable: he hits his high notes, then gives us a moment to unwind. We hardly dare breathe during the Lector/Starling Tennessee scenes -- we're waiting with dread for what we know will come; when it does, it's overwhelming. The plot's also titillating, let's be honest about it, sex change operations and all. Furthermore, serial killers were new to us then; the genre is still remarkably popular, judging by the countless rip-offs of it since. Finally, a lot of the story deals with gruesome material, but the forensics are still fresh, and it's always leavened by the author's black humor.

Harris created two of the most memorable characters in modern fiction in Lector and Starling. The author has an acute ear for dialogue: who doesn't believe the Lector/Starling duets? At another point, Harris has Barney, sole knowledgeable orderly in the mental hospital where Lector has been held, say to Starling," Listen, when you get Buffalo Bill -- don't bring him to me just because I got a vacancy, all right?"

The writer's eye and ear serve him well. He describes a character's car as "a black Buick with a De Paul University sticker on the back window. His weight gave the Buick a slight list to the left." He describes Clarice's thoughts: "Sometimes Crawford's (her boss's) tone reminded Starling of the know-it-all caterpillar in Lewis Carroll." Early in the book, he has Starling driving back to FBI headquarters at Quantico, "back to Behavioral Sciences, with its homey brown-checked curtains and its gray files full of hell. She sat there into the evening, after the last secretary had left, cranking through the Lector microfilm. The contrary old viewer glowed like a jack-o'-lantern in the darkened room...." Sorry, but ya just gotta read the book to get this stuff.
4 people found this helpful
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Flawless

This book will always be for me the ultimate thriller. Flawlessly executed on every level, the story grabbed me by the lapels and smashed my spine against the wall until I'd read the very last word. Unbelievably good in every way possible -- from procedural to character to dialogue, pacing and originality -- the book is the best in the genre. In a somewhat unprecedented move, Harris is being awarded a Lifetime Achievement award from the Horror Writers Association. I can understand why. He's a master storyteller who has penetrated our culture and consciousness like no other.
4 people found this helpful
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Even More Frightening than the Movie. A Must-Read!!!

After seeing the movie some time ago, I was really curious to read the book and see how it was. I am so glad that I read it, because I think it's a work of art. Thomas Harris has created a masterpiece of a frightening tale that will send shivers down your spine and keep you up at night. You will never forget the name, "Hannibal Lecter," no matter how hard you try.
Here is the story: Clarice Starling is a young and promising FBI trainee who is a lot more clever than she leads others to believe. She is sent to talk to Hannibal "The Cannibal" Lecter. This evil fiend is so frightening and brilliant that it will scare the hell out of you. He loves to play mind games and get into the heads of others. He has an agenda of his own, and claims that he can help Starling become famous by catching the notorious woman killer, Buffalo Bill. As the plot gets deeper and deeper, the more evil and darkness lurks about. Killing is only part of the plan, as it turns out. Clarice just might not make it so graduate to an FBI agent if she's not careful.
This is a very suspenseful novel that is very well written. A classic, at that. I actually enjoyed reading this just a little more better than seeing the movie. Though the two are almost the same, the descriptions Harris gives us are unforgettable and horrifying. I especially like how Harris describes Lecter's great escape. Very well-constructed, indeed! The dialogue that spews from Hannibal's mouth is terrifying and ingenius at the same time.
I really enjoyed this novel, and I plan to read it again. I also read "Hannibal," but I didn't find that one as enjoying. All in all, this is an outstanding novel that paints a nightmarish world with evil so terrifying it makes us shiver with ever word that is read. This book will make you thank your lucky stars that it's only fiction...... or is it?
4 people found this helpful
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Time running out

There are only a handful of books that I've read from cover to cover in just one sitting. Thomas Harris' SILENCE OF THE LAMBS was one of them. And for good reasons: his story was completely absorbing and he wrote it well.
You all know the story, especially because of the hit movie. But if you haven't read the book, I urge you to do so. While the film successfully conveyed the psychodrama between Starling and Hannibal, what I thought was missing was the sense of urgency, the suspense that a life was hanging in the balance. The book is a rush because its suspense is so compelling from cover to cover.
3 people found this helpful
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This book will change your reading habits

I bought this book at the airport purely because it was 50% off. Before this, I was reading PD James kind of murder books. I'd seen bits of the movie and it never grabbed me. But the book was another matter - I read from the moment I sat down to when I had to get off the plane. It was only a 3 hour flight so I could't finish the whole book - for the first and only time, I wished the flight was longer so I could go on reading undisturbed! I couldn't even put it down at mealtime, and had to eat with one hand, lucky airline food is so mushy.
This book really got me started and since then I've read many, many dozens of serial killer mysteries, trying for the same thrill. There are a very few books you wish you could erase from your memory, so you can read them for the first time again - this is one of them. The only other murder books as good, that I've found: Red Dragon, and Val McDermid's The Mermaids Singing.
3 people found this helpful
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beware the price gouging on this book for the kindle

Notice the kindle price is more than than the paperback price, which does not follow the pricing format of the other books.
2 people found this helpful
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It rubs the lotion on its skin...

What more can be said about this book? Harris is as meticulous about the study of human behavior as his characters are about the science of criminal profiling. Yet, the science does not war with the primitive creepy crawly feeling presented by the characters. Buffalo Bool is deranged and fascinating, Hannibal Lecter is charming, captivating and something very close to genuine Evil. This is a novel that is already being studied in classrooms and that will continue for generations. But Harris won't let you forget that this is a horror novel. Learn all you want from it and glean all the insights you can handle. It will still make you feel like a five year old concerned about what might be living inside the closet across the room.

-- Mark LaFlamme, author of "The Pink Room."
2 people found this helpful
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One of the best books I've ever read

In the middle book of the Hannibal Lecter series, FBI trainee Clarice Starling is given the odd task of questioning Hannibal "the Cannibal" Lecter to build up a psychological profile on him. Lecter's answers get Clarice involved with the hunt for a serial killer known as only Buffalo Bill.
What started as an odd but safe assignment may lead Clarice to catch a killer or it may end her career or even her life.
I can't really say much about the plot of this book but you've probably seen the movie anyway. This is probably one of the best books I've ever read. It really sucks you in and won't let you go till you're finished. Harris has an interesting way with characterization. A simple, unimportant fact about a character can render you emotionally connected to them. You'll like this book if you like the movie. You'll like this book if you like thrillers. You'll like this book if you are just a fan of well written books. Whatever, just get it!
2 people found this helpful