

A sociopath is never far from a reprehensible solution. He was sure there were ways to do it, but he’d have to research it on the Internet. But you wouldn’t want to drop it off near the murder scene, and if you didn’t, how did you get back to your own car? Walk? That seemed inefficient. You could drive the car someplace and drop it off, though you’d have to be careful about DNA and fingerprints. The last matter was particularly perplexing.

Kill somebody, and there were all kinds of logistics to work out how to keep your DNA off the victim, how to get rid of the body, what to do with the dead man’s car. Killing people was actually a pain in the ass. Sordid encounters between the bad guys abound, and there are some really nasty murders committed by the lead sociopath, Readers get a peek into his twisted internal dialogues: The theft of the tigers forces Flowers into dealing with a truly demented killer. Flowers learns that “the tiger’s real value-they’re Amur tigers, and they’re rare in the wild-would be as ingredients in traditional Chinese medicine.” Readers know whodunit from page one, but that doesn’t destroy the suspense, which comes down to the ticking clock pressuring Flowers ever forward in hopes of finding the tigers before they become so much grist for the Chinese medicinal mill. Two tigers have been stolen from the Minnesota Zoo. This time around, an endangered species is at risk. Flowers is an unconventional investigator for the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension who, in previous entries, has been involved in some fast-paced thrillers. Virgil Flowers, once a bit player in John Sandford’s Prey series, has become the starring character in his own series, which is in its 9th installment with Escape Clause. Escape Clause by John Sandford is the 9th installment of the Virgil Flowers series.
