Ratings34
Average rating3.1
Is evil alive ...? Dr Jerry Halpern is trying to find out, studying for his PhD on the subject. Dexter Morgan, meanwhile, has a few wicked things of his own to contend with - not least, planning his wedding to Rita to complete his nice-guy disguise. But when a student of Halpern's is found burnt, molested and headless - seemingly sacrificed to an ancient god - and Dex is brought in as forensic analyst to help investigate, he realises he could be dealing with someone a whole lot more sinister than he is. Soon it seems the dark passenger in Dexter's head has gone into hiding. And when something creeps out your friendly neighbourhood serial killer, you know it's serious ... As Halpern and Dexter are stalked by death, it looks like it's getting personal - especially as Dex now has a family to protect. Gradually, Dexter realises his stepchildren might share his extra-curricular interest in death. Could he help them target their bloodlust, just as he steers his own? But to do that, Dex must cope with a certain mutilated sergeant from his past, and more importantly ... stay alive ...
Series
8 primary booksDexter is a 8-book series with 8 primary works first released in 2004 with contributions by Jeff Lindsay.
Reviews with the most likes.
Weird book that diverges from the TV show quite a bit. Still an interesting read.
Dexter in the Dark is a change of pace from the earlier Dexter novels, in that Jeff Lindsay steers away from the slice-of-life horror that the series was grounded in and ventures into the supernatural. For anyone who got into the series for its realistic treatment of a sociopath, that can be hard pill to swallow, and at first I was pretty turned off at the idea of Dexter's Dark Passenger being an actual separate entity. But once I decided to just chill and go with it, it was a pretty enjoyable ride. This book portrays a much more impulsive and passionate Dexter, which is a relief after the disconnect that left Dearly Devoted Dexter feeling bland, but still has his callous, inhuman attitude that makes the books and the character so unique and interesting. The ascending action and climax are not really all that impressive, its fairly easy to suss out what's going on, but what holds it together is Dexter. And really, that's all I needed.
Didn't like this at all. No idea what the author was thinking or why he chose to take the story in such a direction. Hopefully the next one gets back to basics. Very disappointing.