Thursday, August 5, 2010

Violets are Blue by James Patterson

Paperback 2001, 391 pages
South Amboy, NJ

I bought this book quite a while ago (2002?). I finally brought it with me on my recent Asian trip and started reading it. Because the overhead light in my HKG-EWR airplane seat wasn't working, I ended up finishing the book after I got back to NJ.

This was a particularly violent book dealing with two cases: a vampire cult and how some members wanted to take over the leadership by committing murders where the old leaders were performing in order to frame them; the "Mastermind" who was after Alex Cross by killing people he cared about. The murders by the vampires wannabes were very gruesome, but at the end their leader was (isn't it always) a regular fellow no one initially suspected. The Mastermind turned out to be someone FBI agent Cross worked with and respected (Kyle Craig); he was eventually caught by Cross.

The novel certainly has its tense moments, but you get the feeling that Patterson didn't quite know how to bring it all together. He admitted as much by having Cross say real life can not be nailed down as neatly as fiction. The irony is of course he was writing fiction, so not being able to nail down a logical plot is more his shortcoming than a problem with real life.

In any case, he was a better writer then than he is today. This is a reasonably good book to read. I don't understand why he used the title "Violets are Blue," though.

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