Ratings4
Average rating4.3
The "master of ticking-bomb suspense" (People) Jeffery Deaver delivers the latest thriller featuring his beloved protagonists Lincoln Rhyme and Amelia Sachs as they search for a criminal whose fascination with breaking locks terrorizes New York City. A woman awakes in the morning to find that someone has picked her apartment’s supposedly impregnable door lock and rearranged personal items, even sitting beside her while she slept. The intrusion, the police learn, is a message to the entire city of carnage to come. Lincoln Rhyme and Amelia Sachs are brought in to investigate and soon learn that the sociopathic intruder, who calls himself "the Locksmith,” can break through any lock or security system ever devised. With more victims on the horizon, Rhyme, Sachs and their stable of associates must follow the evidence to the man’s lair… and discover his true mission. Their hunt is interrupted when an internal investigation in the police force uncovers what seems to be a crucial mistake in one of Rhyme's previous cases. He’s fired as a consultant for the NYPD and must risk jail if he investigates the Locksmith case in secret. The Midnight Lock is a roller-coaster read that takes place over just a few days’ time, features surprise after surprise and offers a fascinating look at the esoteric world of lockpicking.
Featured Series
15 primary books26 released booksLincoln Rhyme is a 26-book series with 15 primary works first released in 1997 with contributions by Jeffery Deaver.
Reviews with the most likes.
It was long time since I'd last read a Jeffery Deaver book, so I enjoyed reading one again, and especially enjoyed getting reacquainted with Lincoln Rhyme and Amelia Sachs.
This was a brilliant book with plenty of twists and turns I didn't see coming. It's amazing how cleverly Jeffery manages to do that!
I thoroughly enjoyed this and will try to catch up with the rest of the series.
Thank you to PH and Jeffery for the chance to read this book.
Would definitely recommend it.
I wasn't immediately drawn in as I have been with past books in the series. It fell flat for me and felt rushed without as much character development as there's been in the past... but kept me interested enough to see it through. Maybe author is getting tired of writing Lincoln Rhyme? Or only doing it out of contractual obligation?