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Allwissend: Thriller von Jeffery Deaver
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Allwissend: Thriller (Original 2009; 2010. Auflage)

von Jeffery Deaver, Thomas Haufschild (Übersetzer)

Reihen: Kathryn Dance (2)

MitgliederRezensionenBeliebtheitDurchschnittliche BewertungDiskussionen
1,5994011,081 (3.6)36
Er kennt alle deine Ängste! Am Straßenrand steht ein Kreuz mit roten Rosen: zum Gedenken an einen Autounfall. Das Todesdatum: morgen. Und tatsächlich entdeckt die Polizei am nächsten Tag eine junge Frau gefangen in einem Kofferraum - nur Sekunden trennen sie vom Tod. Ihr Peiniger wusste offensichtlich, dass sie unter schwerer Klaustrophobie litt. Die Verhörexpertin und psychologische Ermittlerin Kathryn Dance erkennt als Erste, dass der Mörder es darauf abgesehen hat, die schlimmsten Ängste seiner Opfer wahr werden zu lassen. Und weitere Kreuze kündigen weitere Morde an. Was Amelia Sachs und Lincoln Rhyme für New York, ist Kathryn Dance für Kalifornien - mörderisch genial! - Der zweite abgründig spannende Fall für Kathryn Dance, die Ermittlerin aus dem SPIEGEL-Bestseller "Die Menschenleserin?"… (mehr)
Mitglied:Regina2609
Titel:Allwissend: Thriller
Autoren:Jeffery Deaver
Weitere Autoren:Thomas Haufschild (Übersetzer)
Info:Blanvalet Verlag (2010), Gebundene Ausgabe, 544 Seiten
Sammlungen:Deine Bibliothek
Bewertung:****
Tags:Krimi, Kalifornien, Kathryn Dance, Internet-Hetzjagd

Werk-Informationen

Allwissend: Thriller von Jeffery Deaver (2009)

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Están apareciendo cruces en las carreteras de la península de Monterrey, no como memoriales de accidentes pasados, sino como marcadores de muertes por venir... y alguien, armado con información recopilada de publicaciones de blog descuidadas y demasiado personales, tiene la intención de llevar a cabo esos asesinatos. Kathryn Dance y su equipo sabe cuándo ocurrirán los ataques, pero ¿quiénes serán las víctimas? Su experiencia en lenguaje corporal la lleva a un accidente automovilístico fatal reciente y al conductos, Travis Brigham, un adolescente obsesionado con los juegos que se ha convertido en el objetivo de ciber acosadores viciosos. Y cuando Travis desaparece, Kathryn debe liderar una furiosa persecución en el escurridizo mundo de los bloggers y las redes sociales, donde nada es lo que parece...
  Natt90 | Jan 13, 2023 |
A very interesting book.Multiple storylines going on thru this book.I could not fiquire out who did what.It kept me going.Jeffrey Deaver is one of my favorite authors now.Add him to your list.Well worth the reading. ( )
  LizME | Sep 30, 2021 |
The only reason why I gave this book two stars is honestly because I was kind of fascinated by how Deaver looks at internet blogs, comments on those blogs, and how you can start to see how something that he looked back at when this book was published has morphed into what it is today with a lot of people on the internet claiming to be experts on something or how easy it is to spread a rumor about somebody with no factual basis and how it could be picked up and be counted as real news. Other than that the book lost me on multiple levels.

In book two "Roadside Crosses" we have Kathryn Dance still dealing with the fallout from the events of book number one. It appears that this book takes place a couple weeks after those events. Dance and her colleague and friend, Mike O'Neill or off to give a deposition about what transpired in book number one. He and Dance are determined to make an agent who they believed murdered people pay. They are called back from an oddly arranged romantic interlude and are brought in on an abduction of a young girl who was placed in a trunk of a car. Dance and O'Neil find themselves trying to use a local blogger for clues to what could be behind this abduction and what appears to be planned murders of people.

Dance and her skills definitely take a backseat in this one. I think that there were only two times that she got to use her skills as a body language expert and the rest of the time was just her flailing around and listening to men give her lectures on what the internet is and gaming. I found myself really bored by her character and she doesn't seem like the strong smart woman that she was in "Cold Moon." And I don't know what Deaver's deal is with having every man that comes across Dance be a potential love interest, but I really hope that stops in the next book. I thought it was a little bit weird and odd that she seems to be developing friends feelings for her married colleague but also was attracted to a professor that they just met who was called in to help out on this case. And I maybe I wouldn't say anything except the last guy that she liked turned out to be a murderer so maybe her sense of who's a good person to date is just flawed.

A really big problem with what I think pushed me away from Dance this time though was the fact she's in her late thirties and has two kids, one of who is 12 and she seemed completely baffled by the internet. She did not seem to understand how to use it, what blogs were, etc. I mean I don't work with computers for a living but even I know about all that stuff so I thought that was very far-fetched. Especially since Dance has her own website. We find out in this book and I think that's it in the last one as well that Dance and a friend of hers go about recording what's considered folk music songs and record it and sell it on her website. So if she does that she has to be able to use a computer.

I can't really speak about any other characters. Everyone else was very paper-thin and we didn't really get a chance to get into other characters mindset.

Dance's partner O'Neill was missing in action for half of the book but every time he and Dance are in the same room together it was awkward.

There was also something involving Dance's mother that I had a hard time with and I don't know why it was even introduced in this book. I think Deaver was going for some intrigue but it totally totally lost me. If you read the first book you know that a colleague of Dance's died after being injured on the first case. We find out in this book that somebody did a mercy killing because he would not have lived long. Dance's mother is accused of this. There doesn't seem to be any real evidence why she would have did this and I thought it was a big stretch. But I think that that really got me there was that Dance is completely oblivious to the problems and trouble her mother is in and even has a dinner party to have people come over and insist that her mother and father come over after she's (the mom) been arrested for murder. I kind of scratched my head at that one.

I also rolled my eyes at Dance and her mother questioning O'Neill's wife parenting cause she dared to travel.

Say something nice. It was interesting how Deaver tied the book into the internet with actual links that a reservation could go to and read. I think he wanted to make it as immersive as possible. Unfortunately I don't think he thought about what happened a if you're not reading on an e-reader or computer though. I assume hardback or paperback readers just were out of luck.

I do think that Deaver's description of gamers was off the mark though.

The flow was pretty awful in this one. Every chapter seemed to hang on a mini cliffhanger and we get some twists thrown our way that don't work. Ot of nowhere we have the solution to who is behind these abductions, but wait, here's a twist. And the twist didn't even make any sense. Same goes for Dance's mother's arrest.

The book ends on an odd note with it looking like Dance may be torn between two men. ( )
  ObsidianBlue | Jul 1, 2020 |
Kathryn Dance, is a specialist in reading people. The momentary smile or constant blinking of a suspect--something those without her training would never notice--gives her real insight into whether a suspect is lying or not. This time, she is up against an internet genius. Someone, it seems, is putting up roadside crosses, not, as is usual, as a memorial to someone who died in an auto crash. But as a way to announce a coming death. But why? And who?

"Roadside Crosses" explores the dark side of blogging and cyber-bullying, resulting in multiple deaths of readers of a popular online blog. As always, Deaver does his research into the subject, and puts it across in an entertaining way. Kathryn Dance is a great new character, and this is the second book in her series. Deaver creates a great supporting cast, so you really become involved in her story, her family and her romantic life. The only downside of "Roadside Crosses" is that Deaver takes his classic twist ending a bit too far, resulting in a messy and unsatisfying conclusion. Generally I enjoy his twisting conclusions and like being led down one path, only to end up on another; however it wasn't executed well in this story. A bit of a disappointment to end so weakly after being immersed in a great story. ( )
  Carol420 | May 31, 2016 |
I was confused at times and on some aspects just wanted to get it over. ( )
  gma2lana | May 9, 2016 |
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Das Internet und die dort kultisch bewahrte Anonymität verleihen jedermann quasi die Generalvollmacht, ungestraft alles Mögliche über jede beliebige andere Person zu äußern. Ich kann mir kaum einen moralisch verwerflicheren Missbrauch des Gedankens der Redefreiheit vorstellen.

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Er kennt alle deine Ängste! Am Straßenrand steht ein Kreuz mit roten Rosen: zum Gedenken an einen Autounfall. Das Todesdatum: morgen. Und tatsächlich entdeckt die Polizei am nächsten Tag eine junge Frau gefangen in einem Kofferraum - nur Sekunden trennen sie vom Tod. Ihr Peiniger wusste offensichtlich, dass sie unter schwerer Klaustrophobie litt. Die Verhörexpertin und psychologische Ermittlerin Kathryn Dance erkennt als Erste, dass der Mörder es darauf abgesehen hat, die schlimmsten Ängste seiner Opfer wahr werden zu lassen. Und weitere Kreuze kündigen weitere Morde an. Was Amelia Sachs und Lincoln Rhyme für New York, ist Kathryn Dance für Kalifornien - mörderisch genial! - Der zweite abgründig spannende Fall für Kathryn Dance, die Ermittlerin aus dem SPIEGEL-Bestseller "Die Menschenleserin?"

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