Golden Prey

Front Cover
Penguin, 2017 - Fiction - 392 pages
THE NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER

Lucas Davenport's first case as a U.S. Marshal sends him into uncharted territory in the thrilling new novel in the #1 New York Times-bestselling series.

The man was smart and he didn't mind killing people. Welcome to the big leagues, Davenport.

Thanks to some very influential people whose lives he saved, Lucas is no longer working for the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, but for the U.S. Marshals Service, and with unusual scope. He gets to pick his own cases, whatever they are, wherever they lead him.

And where they've led him this time is into real trouble. A Biloxi, Mississippi, drug-cartel counting house gets robbed, and suitcases full of cash disappear, leaving behind five bodies, including that of a six-year-old girl. Davenport takes the case, which quickly spirals out of control, as cartel assassins, including a torturer known as the "Queen of home-improvement tools" compete with Davenport to find the Dixie Hicks shooters who knocked over the counting house. Things get ugly real fast, and neither the cartel killers nor the holdup men give a damn about whose lives Davenport might have saved; to them, he's just another large target.

Filled with his trademark razor-sharp plotting and some of the best characters in suspense fiction, Golden Prey is further reason why "Sandford has always been at the top of any list of great mystery writers" (The Huffington Post).

 

Selected pages

Contents

Section 1
1
Section 2
20
Section 3
39
Section 4
63
Section 5
72
Section 6
81
Section 7
106
Section 8
119
Section 15
222
Section 16
237
Section 17
260
Section 18
272
Section 19
287
Section 20
296
Section 21
309
Section 22
322

Section 9
131
Section 10
137
Section 11
155
Section 12
170
Section 13
189
Section 14
211
Section 23
343
Section 24
347
Section 25
366
Section 26
376
Copyright

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About the author (2017)

John Sandford is the pseudonym for the Pulitzer Prize- winning journalist John Camp. He is the author of twenty-seven Prey novels; four Kidd novels; nine Virgil Flowers novels; three YA novels coauthored with his wife, Michele Cook; and three other books, most recently Saturn Run.