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What Comes Next

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
One man infiltrates the dark web to stop a sadistic game: A Booklist 101 Best Crime Novels of the Past Decade, from the New York Times–bestselling author.
 
Adrian Thomas is a psychology professor whose career was spent delving into damaged minds. Diagnosed with a fatal degenerative disease that is causing hallucinations and stripping him of his memories, Adrian wants to end his life—until he sees a girl snatched off the street and dragged screaming into the back of a van. Dismissed as an unreliable witness, Adrian must act alone. He knows what he saw, but he has no idea how dark it’s going to get.
 
Out of the basement of their Massachusetts farmhouse, a sadistic husband and wife run a website called What Comes Next. A global audience of subscribers is tuning in to watch an ongoing nightmare inflicted in real time—and to cast their votes on the fate of the kidnappers’ latest catch. For victim Number Four, time is running out.
 
“An experience akin to riding the scariest roller coaster,” What Comes Next is a bold and timely thriller about what lurks within the depths of society’s most depraved minds (New York Journal of Books).
 
“Powerful . . . fiendish . . . This is an exceptional novel—and a most troubling one.” —The Washington Post
 
“Draw[s] you deeper and deeper into a chilling atmosphere of evil, darkness, and shadows.” —The Miami Herald
 
“[A] re-imagining of The Pit and the Pendulum for the digital age.” —Kirkus Reviews
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from March 26, 2012
      Set in a small western Massachusetts college town, bestseller Katzenbach’s impressively powerful and emotional thriller delves into dementia, teenage angst, and Internet voyeurism. After receiving a diagnosis of degenerative dementia, a slow but sure death sentence, Adrian Thomas, a retired professor alone in the world who has “spent much of his academic life studying fear,” decides to go home and shoot himself, but fate intervenes. When Adrian pulls into his driveway, he witnesses a man and a woman in an unmarked van kidnap 16-year-old Jennifer Riggins, who’s running away from home. The couple have seized Jennifer to star in Whatcomesnext.com, a Web site where viewers watch the girl’s torture in real time. Despite his failing mind, Adrian is able to use the psychological insights he gleaned as a professor to hunt for Jennifer. The tense plot smoothly shifts between Adrian, who teams with a skeptical, compassionate detective, and the captive girl. Katzenbach (The Wrong Man) avoids the clichés of dementia, while deftly showing the inner resolve that Adrian and Jennifer each discover in themselves. Agent: Moses Cardona, John Hawkins & Associates.

    • Kirkus

      May 1, 2012
      Katzenbach (The Madman's Tale, 2004, etc.) sets an amateur sleuth living on borrowed time to hunt a kidnapped teenager whose time is even shorter in this pulp-ish re-imagining of "The Pit and the Pendulum" for the digital age. Jennifer Riggins is the fourth victim her abductors have taken, and by now they've gotten most of the bugs out of their routine. Deftly snatching her as she's running away from home yet again, the criminal lovers hood her and chain her in a basement in a Massachusetts farmhouse they've rented and put a video feed online for thousands of voyeuristic subscribers around the world who can't stop watching the ultimate reality show. There's only one fly in the ointment: The kidnapping was witnessed by Adrian Thomas, a retired psychology professor on his way home to kill himself after getting a diagnosis of Lewy body dementia, a rare illness that acts like Alzheimer's speeded up. Adrian is already prone to hallucinations and short-term memory lapses, and Det. Terri Collins doesn't find him the ideal witness. On the other hand, now that he's summoned them from the grave, his late wife, his late brother and his late son all provide him with genuinely helpful suggestions, and it doesn't hurt to have Jennifer, now known to her global audience as Number 4, sought by someone with absolutely nothing to lose. Leaning on Mark Wolfe, a registered sex offender, for help doing the unspeakable online research, Adrian slowly zeroes in on the basement where she's being held. But can he rescue her from the fiendish torments her inventive captors have lined up for her? So sadistically measured in its pace that readers will have plenty of time to ask themselves how different they really are from the perverts tuned in to Number 4's sufferings.

      COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      January 1, 2012

      A girl named Jennifer Riggins has been kidnapped by a depraved couple who broadcast her torture on a website watched by thousands. Jennifer's only hope is a retired university professor, just diagnosed with a fatal disease, who witnessed the kidnapping. Too scary for me, but Katzenbach has a good track record--three of his books have been made into films.

      Copyright 2012 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from May 15, 2012
      An abducted teenager. A perverted villain (or villains). A chase to save the victim. These are not unfamiliar ingredients in contemporary thrillers, but Katzenbach reinvents the formula several times over in this absolutely gripping novel. It starts with Adrian Thomas, a retired psychology professor, learning that the memory loss and vivid hallucinations he has been experiencing have been diagnosed as Lewy Body Dementia, a rare diseaseAlzheimer's on steroidsin which the victim suffers from the typical symptoms of dementia along with rapidly progressing loss of bodily functioning. At home and planning suicide, Adrian observes a teen girl apparently being kidnapped. Quickly, it's determined that the girl may have been a runaway, Jennifer Riggins. While the detective on the case plays it by the book, the clock ticks. In interspersed chapters from the points of view of the victim and her abductors, we learn that Jennifer has become Number Four, the unwilling star of a pay-for-view webcast (whatcomesnext.com) in which voyeurs eagerly watch the torture, rape, and, ultimately, murder of the hostage. Spurred on by his wife, brother, and sonall dead but speaking to him through disease-driven hallucinationsAdrian becomes the most unlikely of sleuths, aided by an equally unlikely sidekick, a paroled sex offender, who serves as a guide to the Internet's netherworld. It sounds like an unbelievable premise on multiple levels, but Katzenbach makes it all work, thanks to carefully detailed background on Thomas' disease, to chilling looks at the twisted psyches of the webmasters and the sex offender turned sidekick, and especially to the remarkably textured portraits of Jennifer and Adrian, the former fighting to survive, the latter struggling to keep his disease at bay long enough to save a life. Combining the intricacy of psychological fiction with the pulse-pounding narrative of plot-driven suspense, this may well be the most original thriller since Chelsea Cain's Heartsick (2007). Don't miss it.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)

    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 30, 2012
      Katzenbach’s latest thriller charts the efforts of retired college professor Adrian Thomas to solve a kidnapping he witnessed on the usually peaceful streets of his picturesque New England town. His journey leads him into a sinister world of unspeakable sexual exploitation, available for viewing via the Internet with just a few clicks of a mouse. William Roberts turns in an effective, nuanced performance in this audio edition. His evocative reading captures the horror of the dark basement in which Jennifer Riggins finds herself held hostage, and his rendition of Jennifer’s inner monologue is sincere and touching. Roberts also successfully navigates a potential minefield in his balanced portrayal of the convicted sex offender who uses his unsavory experiences and desires to help Adrian work the case and attempt to free Jennifer. And while Roberts occasionally fails to distinguish the book’s male characters during sections of dialogue, this is a minor flaw in an otherwise entertaining listen. A Mysterious Press hardcover.

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from June 1, 2012

      Retired psychology professor Adrian Thomas, recently diagnosed with progressive dementia, witnesses the abduction of a neighborhood teen named Jennifer. Adrian reports the crime to police but also launches an independent search. Despite memory loss and frequent hallucinatory "visits" from deceased relatives, he battles to solve the crime. His investigation leads to the seedy underworld of Internet pornography and snuff pages and eventually to a popular pay-per-view website where voyeurs worldwide are consumed with what comes next for an imprisoned teen known only as Number 4. Will Adrian locate Jennifer before illness overwhelms him? Will his investigation help or deter the police? Will the fate of Number 4 continue to attract online viewers, or will her captors gain more if she dies? Spellbound readers will be turning pages quickly to see what comes next. VERDICT Katzenbach (The Madman's Tale; Hart's War) has crafted a suspenseful cat-and-mouse thriller, a perfect literary mash-up of The Truman Show and Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. Already an international best seller, this will be widely popular with psychological thriller devotees.--Mary Todd Chesnut, Northern Kentucky Univ. Lib., Highland Heights

      Copyright 2012 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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