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Black Lightning
Black Lightning
Author: John Saul
For five years Seattle has been seized in the terrifying grip of a monster as black as evil itself: a sadistic serial killer who methodically lures his victims to grisly deaths in order to satisfy a twisted passion. — For five years journalist Anne Jeffers has pursued this horrifying story like a woman obsessed -- following the killer's captu...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780449908648
ISBN-10: 044990864X
Publication Date: 6/24/1995
Pages: 392
Rating:
  • Currently 3.6/5 Stars.
 59

3.6 stars, based on 59 ratings
Publisher: Fawcett
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback, Audio CD
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

cozynblue avatar reviewed Black Lightning on + 36 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
"All the right scares in all the right places. Tension and terror....A suspense-filled and logical tale."
reviewed Black Lightning on + 9 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
If the killer has been executed, why are the murders continuing? The journalist who attended the execution can't forget his words to her. Why did he believe it wouldn't end with his death? Because the murders have begun again. Scary stuff!
Rev avatar reviewed Black Lightning on + 95 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
A bit hokey, as far as these kinds of books go. This is the first John Saul book I've read, and while it was a quick and enjoyable read, I really hope this isn't the best he's got. Don't get me wrong, I enjoy a hokey horror story as much as anyone, and I don't mind the plot device being a little far-fetched, hard-to-believe, and never fully explained. But when the other characters in the book figure out the mystery that is so out there that the reader himself (that's me) doesn't buy it, that kind of ruins it a bit for me. Again, not bad, just a bit hokey. I think Dean R. Koontz did a better job with Hideaway. Did I mention that I thought it was a bit hokey? That's right. Hokey.
reviewed Black Lightning on + 46 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Fast pacing and skillful narrative misdirection make this supernatural thriller one of Saul's (The Homing) best?and one of his few not to focus on children in peril. Richard Kraven, the novel's heavy, is as nasty as they come: he eviscerates his victims before they die, in the misguided hope of learning the mystery of life. He also seems to be extending his murder spree after his execution in the electric chair. At least that's what reporter Anne Jeffers tries to prove to the incredulous Seattle police as the killings strike ever closer to her home and family, apparently in retaliation for her help in putting Kraven behind bars. Saul ratchets up the suspense by intercutting chapters told from the points of view of Anne, detective Mark Blakemoor and a serial murderer who thinks of himself as "The Experimenter." He complicates matters by introducing another murderer and by raising suspicions about Anne's husband, Glen, who suffered a heart attack at the moment Kraven died and now experiences blackouts that coincide with the killings. Saul depends on remarkably unobservant cops and a contrived occult explanation to tie all the subplots together, but he sustains the mystery of the killer's identity and motives throughout.
Moo avatar reviewed Black Lightning on + 111 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
For five years Seattle was seized in the terrifying grip of a monster as black as evil itself. A sadistic serial killer methodically lured his victims to grisly deaths in order to satisfy a twisted passion for life, leaving a trail of mutilated bodies across the nation.

For five years journalist Anne Jeffers stuck to this gruesome story like a shadow through the killer's capture, trial and appeal doggedly keeping the wheels of justice churning toward the electric chair, despite the prisoner's reasoned claims of innocence.

Then came the day of execution. The police and the public, especially Anne, thought the five-year nightmare was over.

But it was just beginning...

Someone or something is murdering again, mirroring a sociopath's lurid desire to hold life in the palms of his hands. Despite mounting doubts, Anne Jeffers is determined to prove that the guilty man was indeed executed. Yet what she finds is a sinister, powerful force that defies even death. Now pure evil has taken a new form, and it longs for Anne....

In Black Lightning, John Saul strikes with a novel as electrifying as a jagged bolt from a pitch-dark sky, proving once again that he is a genius at both nail-biting suspense and the spine-tingling macabre...http://www.johnsaul.com/

This story was an edge off your seat fasinating story. A story I will read again and again.
Read All 35 Book Reviews of "Black Lightning"

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reviewed Black Lightning on + 460 more book reviews
it takes awhile to get moving but once it does it's hard to put down. If you like a build up, this does just that and then takes off.
reviewed Black Lightning on + 50 more book reviews
Journalist Anne Jeffers has followed the story of a sadistic serial killer for five years, and is present when the killer is executed, but in days a similar murder takes place. Could a copycat know the gruesome details of that were never made public or did they execute the wrong man????
Keeps you on your toes
Lelopit avatar reviewed Black Lightning on + 273 more book reviews
Excellent serial killer book,great twist!
reviewed Black Lightning on + 204 more book reviews
I did not feel this was a typical Saul work. I believe the plot was a little bit on the simple side and was redundant at times.
reviewed Black Lightning on + 209 more book reviews
Good scare but not his best.
RoyalCatwoman avatar reviewed Black Lightning on + 278 more book reviews
Richard Kraven, the novel's heavy, is as nasty as they come: he eviscerates his victims before they die, in the misguided hope of learning the mystery of life. He also seems to be extending his murder spree after his execution in the electric chair. At least that's what reporter Anne Jeffers tries to prove to the incredulous Seattle police as the killings strike ever closer to her home and family, apparently in retaliation for her help in putting Kraven behind bars. Saul ratchets up the suspense by intercutting chapters told from the points of view of Anne, detective Mark Blakemoor and a serial murderer who thinks of himself as "The Experimenter." He complicates matters by introducing another murderer and by raising suspicions about Anne's husband, Glen, who suffered a heart attack at the moment Kraven died and now experiences blackouts that coincide with the killings. Saul depends on remarkably unobservant cops and a contrived occult explanation to tie all the subplots together, but he sustains the mystery of the killer's identity and motives throughout.


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