avatarMarie A. Rebelle

Summary

The website content provides a review of John Verdon's mystery novel "Think of a Number," featuring retired detective Dave Gurney, and discusses the intriguing plot involving a chilling game with a serial killer who seems to know his victims' thoughts.

Abstract

The article delves into the audiobook "Think of a Number" by John Verdon, which centers around the enigmatic case of a killer who challenges his victims to think of a number, only to reveal it in a sealed letter, leading to a complex and engaging mystery. The protagonist, Dave Gurney, is a retired NYPD homicide detective who gets drawn into the case when an old college friend receives these letters and is subsequently murdered. The story unfolds with Gurney's investigation, exploring the killer's methods and motives, while also touching on Gurney's personal life and relationship with his wife, Madeleine. The review highlights the book's success, its translation into multiple languages, and the subsequent series of books featuring the same detective. The narrative is praised for balancing detective work with personal elements, making it an enjoyable and suspenseful read.

Opinions

  • The reviewer was intrigued by the mystery presented in the book's blurb, which was enough to prompt them to listen to the audiobook.
  • The story is commended for its ability to maintain suspense and for the author's skill in developing the plot in an entertaining way.
  • The reviewer appreciates the balance between the detective's professional challenges and his personal life, particularly his relationship with his wife.
  • The novel's success is attributed to its engaging narrative and the author's ability to create a compelling mystery that keeps the reader guessing.
  • The killer's method of predicting the victims' thoughts is highlighted as a unique and chilling aspect of the story.
Image from Audible.co.uk

(AUDIO) BOOK REVIEW

Don’t Play This Chilling Game Of Numbers

Book review: Think Of A Number By John Verdon

We can argue that a detective is a detective is a detective, or that each erotic story ends the same, but the way the author introduces the story and develops it can go a long way to keep the reader entertained.

It was the mystery mentioned in the blurb of this story, when shown in my list of recommended listens, which drove me to click the ‘play’ button.

The author, John Verdon

John Verdon, born on 1 January 1942, graduated from Regis High School in New York City and Fordham University. He was interested in martial arts, motorcycles, and sports cars, and he even worked as a stuntman in a theme park, but he always knew he wanted to be a writer.

Since he also had to earn a living, he worked in the advertising industry in New York City.

When he retired, he and his wife left the city and moved to a rural area in the western foothills of the Catskill Mountains. There he spent the next ten years designing and building furniture, while becoming a fan of classic detective stories.

Naomi, wife of John. inspired him to write his first mystery novel — Think of a Number. The success, as well as the critique the book received, lead to the second book — Shut Your Eyes Tight — and it featured the same characters as in John Verdon’s first book. A series with a retired NYPD homicide detective, Dave Gurney, flowed from John’s pen.

Books in the series were translated into over two dozen languages, and the rest of those Dave Gurney books are: *** Let the Devil Sleep *** Peter Pan Must Die *** Wolf Lake *** White River Burning *** On Harrow Hill

Dave Gurney, the detective

This detective and his wife have moved out of the city after his retirement (sounds familiar, right?), and he accidentally finds himself a new job, making art from the images of the faces of convicted criminals. His wife, Madeleine, is constantly trying to get him to also do his chores around the house.

Then an old college mate contacted him about letters he has received, and Dave gets caught up in the mystery of those letters, and even more so after the acquaintance’s horrific murder.

The killer — sender of those and following letters — has asked the college mate to think of a number. He did, and inside the letter was… the same number. How did the killer know this? Where did the killer get his information?

How will Dave Gurney solve this crime, and what does he do when his wife becomes the target of this serial killer?

An enjoyable read

As said in my introduction, the blurb of this story was enough to make me want to listen to it. At first, I wanted to know how the killer knew a number someone would think of, and of course, I wanted to find out who the killer was, and what his motive was for killing.

As the story unfolds, it’s not only about the detective work but also about Dave Gurney’s relationship with his wife. It keeps the story in balance.

This is the blurb of the book:

It begins with a letter… The letter contains a request — think of a number, any number — and a sealed envelope. Inside the envelope is that number… When Dave Gurney, retired NYPD homicide detective, is contacted by an old college acquaintance about some startling letters he’s been receiving, it is at first little more than a diverting but sinister puzzle. Until the acquaintance is brutally killed.

Suddenly Gurney finds himself in the middle of a murder investigation that makes no sense. The killer seems to have known his victim intimately. How else was he able to predict his victim’s thoughts, even his actions? How did he know his darkest secrets? The killer is smart and he is playing with the police… From Audible.co.uk

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Book Review
Detective
Short Story
Fiction
Audiobooks
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