About the Book:
Dexter Morgan is not your average serial killer. He enjoys his day job as a blood spatter analyst for the Miami Police Department . . . but he lives for his nighttime hobby of hunting other killers. Dexter is therefore not pleased to discover that someone is shadowing him, observing him, and copying his methods. Dexter is not one to tolerate displeasure . . . in fact, he has a knack for extricating himself from trouble in his own pleasurable way.
Like the previous five best-selling novels in the Dexter series, Double Dexter showcases the witty, macabre originality that has propelled Jeff Lindsay to international success. Double Dexter is raucously entertaining . . . full of smart suspense and dark laughs.
Book Review: ★★★★★★
Ok — I have to admit it. We all have our guilty pleasures when it comes to reading. Something that isn’t exactly classic literature, and doesn’t require a whole lot of thought. For some it is the romance novels, others science fiction or fantasy. For me it is Dexter Morgan — and his psychopathic, gallows humor. His passion for duct tape and fishing wire, while living under the “Harry Code” is something that is refreshing in the field of murder mystery novels. Combine that with his almost pathological aversion to blood (as a blood spatter analyst) and you simply have the makings for a character that is both memorable and fun.
This installment has Dexter chasing child killers in his own fashion, while at the same time finding he, himself is being stalked by another hunter of the darkly perverted. With the tables turned, Dexter is gaining a new appreciation for what it means to be on the dark list of a serial killer that is hunting for purely “moral” reasons. During this chase, Dexter gives the reader his own insight into the bizarre world of human nature — and the crazing things that humans do simply through the course of living. I think it is this interesting insight that keeps me coming back to the Dexter series. His emotionally removed, narcissistic perspective gives the reader an almost surreal look into the human psyche, and the motivations that are behind the weird circumstances we all find ourselves in. The book is also filled with the dark Dexterisms that we have all come to know and love.
I have recently been involved in several conversations regarding the Dexter series — particularly when I tell them I am currently reading another Dexter book. They all want to have these great philosophical discussions on the merits of Dexter’s world. Unfortunately there is no comparison. Since most people have fallen in love with the Dexter television series — something that I really wasn’t all that impressed with — I find that we have a hard time comparing the books and the shows in this particular interest. From what I have heard the shows go off in all kinds of weird directions — where the book does not go. (Maybe that is why I didn’t like it as much as I do the novels.) So, for this reader, I will stay with the books.
Dexter’s step-children are another part of this series that is really starting to amuse me. As Dexter plays daddy to these little, budding dark villains, Dexter struggles to instill in them the “Harry Code” before they can begin their long walk into the world of murder and mayhem. There is just something very idiosyncratic in the presentation of moral daddy Dexter juxtaposed over the narcissistic killer of the morally depraved. It is just bizarre to say the least. And in this one that becomes very apparent in their family trip to Key West to buy a home, and the only thing Cody and Aster are interested in doing is going to “feed the sharks.” Simply classic in the dark world of Dexter.
Lindsay has another wonderful novel in Double Dexter, and one that I particularly enjoyed. Tags: Dexter, Humor, Murder, Mystery, Serial Killer, Suspense
Category: Fiction, Humor, Mystery, Suspense/Thriller
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