The Devil's Feather

The Devil's Feather

by Minette Walters (Author)

Synopsis

Have you ever wanted to bury a secret so deeply that no one will find out about it?

With private security firms supplying bodyguards in every theatre of war, who will notice the emergence of a sexual psychopath from the ranks of the mercenaries?

Amidst the turmoil of Sierra Leone's vicious civil war, the brutal murder of five women is of little consequence and no one questions the `confessions' that were beaten out of three child soldiers. Except for Reuters correspondent Connie Burns. After witnessing a savage attack on a prostitute, Connie believes a foreigner's responsible. She has seen him before, and she suspects he uses the chaos of war to act out sadistic fantasies against women.

Two years later in Iraq, the consequences of her second attempt to expose him are devastating. Terrified, degraded and destroyed, she goes into hiding in England where she strikes up a friendship with Jess Derbyshire, a loner whose reclusive nature may well be masking secrets of her own. Seeing parallels between herself and Jess, Connie borrows from the other woman's strength and makes the hazardous decision to attempt a third unmasking of a serial killer . . .

Knowing he will come looking for her . . .

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 416
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Macmillan
Published: 02 Sep 2005

ISBN 10: 1405052406
ISBN 13: 9781405052405

Media Reviews
The Devil's Feather seems like a mystery intent on being politically timely. But because Walters is a far better writer than that, her new novel is much more, dealing with the timeless theme of victimization . . . With a casual, easy-to-read writing style, Walters is a rare breed: the kind of author who can concoct believable characters and set them down in the middle of entertaining plots that address timeless moral issues.
-Dorman T. Shindler, Denver Post
A scary thriller . . . Walters has the ability to use horror-movie logic to terrifying effect.
- The New Yorker
Some of today's best young writers are moving the crime novel in the direction of the social novel, examining individual crimes against a background of larger injustice and The Devil's Feather moves in this direction . . . Its strongest scenes offer searing realism: rape and murder in Sierra Leone and Iraq, and flashbacks to Burns's family losing its Zimbabwe farm to thugs supported by the Mugabe regime. Those episodes have urgency and bite . . . Walters is a talented writer.
-Patrick Anderson, The Washington Post
Walters keeps the details of her heroine's kidnapping chillingly vague . . . While awaiting her Eye of the Needle reckoning with MacKenzie, Burns unravels an appalling local crime. Walters gracefully balances crowd-pleasing theatrics with a wickedly ambiguous ending.
- Entertainment Weekly (EW pick)
The number of high-grade thrillers set in and around the horrors of Iraq increases as writers catch up with the real crimes behind the headlines. Minette Walters' excellent new contribution, The Devil's Feather, begins in 2004 in Baghdad . . . Trying torecover her mental stability in a strange, haunted house in Dorset, England, Burns makes friends with some supportive residents and waits-as do we-for the inevitable return of her once and future nemesis. The ending certainly is worth waiting around for.
-Dick Adler, Chicago Tribune
Readers can count on Britain's Minette Walters for a steady stream of creepiness. Her latest novel, The Devil's Feather, fills that quotient and then some . . . It's all chilling stuff, and it's everything Walters' fans have come to expect. Neither a series maker nor a formula writer, Walters makes her mysteries works of wide variety. But all are marked by a full measure of suspense and a hint of ambiguity . . . A fulfilling read.
-Jay Strafford, Richmond Times-Dispatch
At one time, all it took to produce a page-turner was a clever variation on the standard formula of a plucky woman outwitting her maniacal stalker. But thanks to writers like Minette Walters, who keep pushing the boundaries, the old conventions are now more likely to be used as structural support for an analysis of timely social and political issues . . . The Devil's Feather has a psychologically complex protagonist and multilayered plot . . . The story is so involving, with its graphic accounts of mind control and sensitive observations about victim psychology, that you hardly realize how skillfully Walters has worked her unifying theme into three intersecting plot lines . . . She takes the suspense novel into new territory.
-Marilyn Stasio, New York Times Book Review
A harrowing psychological thriller . . . Walters delivers an intense, engrossingly structured tour de force about survival and 'thesecret of freedom, courage.'
- Publishers Weekly (starred)
Have current events finally caught up with Walters's unremittingly brutal imagination? The latest of her masterful psychological thrillers examines the effects of terrorism as it ranges from Baghdad to West Dorset . . . Genteel and horrifying as ever.
- Kirkus Reviews (starred)
The Devil's Feather takes a sharp turn from hard-hitting war reporting in the Baghdad section to gothic chiller when the setting switches to England. Barton House is a spooky, Bronte-like construction . . . Walters really knows how to write convincing, ever-escalating psychological suspense.
- Booklist
The Devil's Feather is another Walters tour de force. The combination of fast-moving thriller and acute exploration of the psychotic mind makes this a knockout.
- The Observer
A thriller that really does thrill-partly because we care about its protagonists, and partly because Minette Walters has an enormous talent for old-fashioned story-telling.
- Spectator
A thoughtful and accomplished thriller.
- Daily Telegraph
Walters has succeeded in uniting the traditional crime narrative with a distressing and effective account of the private cruelties that can flourish amid general mayhem. In doing so, she takes the genre to a deeper level.
- The Independent
This is high octane, on-the-edge stuff, at which Walters excels . . . The Devil's Feather is engrossing reading.
- The Times (London)

From the Hardcover edition.


The Devil' s Feather seems like a mystery intent on being politically timely. But because Walters is a far better writer than that, her new novel is much more, dealing with the timeless theme of victimization . . . With a casual, easy-to-read writing style, Walters is a rare breed: the kind of author who can concoct believable characters and set them down in the middle of entertaining plots that address timeless moral issues.
- Dorman T. Shindler, Denver Post
A scary thriller . . . Walters [has the] ability to use horror-movie logic to terrifying effect.
- The New Yorker
Some of today' s best young writers are moving the crime novel in the direction of the social novel, examining individual crimes against a background of larger injustice [and] The Devil' s Feather moves in this direction . . . Its strongest scenes offer searing realism: rape and murder in Sierra Leone and Iraq, and flashbacks to Burns' s family losing its Zimbabwe farm to thugs supported by the Mugabe regime. Those episodes have urgency and bite . . . Walters is a talented writer.
- Patrick Anderson, The Washington Post
Walters keeps the details [of her heroine' s kidnapping] chillingly vague . . . While awaiting her Eye of the Needle reckoning with MacKenzie, [Burns] unravels an appalling local crime. Walters gracefully balances crowd-pleasing theatrics with a wickedly ambiguous ending.
- Entertainment Weekly (EW pick)
The number of high-grade thrillers set in and around the horrors of Iraq increases as writers catch up with the real crimes behind theheadlines. Minette Walters' excellent new contribution, The Devil' s Feather, begins in 2004 [in] Baghdad . . . Trying to recover her mental stability in a strange, haunted house in Dorset, England, Burns makes friends with some supportive residents and waits- as do we- for the inevitable return of her once and future nemesis. [The ending] certainly is worth waiting around for.
- Dick Adler, Chicago Tribune
Readers can count on Britain' s Minette Walters for a steady stream of creepiness. Her latest novel, The Devil' s Feather, fills that quotient and then some . . . It' s all chilling stuff, and it' s everything Walters' fans have come to expect. Neither a series maker nor a formula writer, Walters makes her mysteries works of wide variety. But all are marked by a full measure of suspense and a hint of ambiguity . . . A fulfilling read.
- Jay Strafford, Richmond Times-Dispatch
At one time, all it took to produce a page-turner was a clever variation on the standard formula of a plucky woman outwitting her maniacal stalker. But thanks to writers like Minette Walters, who keep pushing the boundaries, the old conventions are now more likely to be used as structural support for an analysis of timely social and political issues . . . [ The Devil' s Feather has a] psychologically complex protagonist [and] multilayered plot . . . The story is so involving, with its graphic accounts of mind control and sensitive observations about victim psychology, that you hardly realize how skillfully Walters has worked her unifying theme into three intersecting plot lines . . . Shetakes the suspense novel into new territory.
- Marilyn Stasio, New York Times Book Review
[A] harrowing psychological thriller . . . Walters delivers an intense, engrossingly structured tour de force about survival and ' the secret of freedom, courage.'
- Publishers Weekly (starred)
Have current events finally caught up with Walters' s unremittingly brutal imagination? The latest of her masterful psychological thrillers examines the effects of terrorism as it ranges from Baghdad to West Dorset . . . Genteel and horrifying as ever.
- Kirkus Reviews (starred)
[ The Devil' s Feather ] takes a sharp turn from hard-hitting war reporting in the Baghdad section to gothic chiller when the setting switches to England. Barton House is a spooky, Bronte -like construction . . . Walters really knows how to write convincing, ever-escalating psychological suspense.
- Booklist
The Devil' s Feather is another Walters tour de force. The combination of fast-moving thriller and acute exploration of the psychotic mind makes this a knockout.
- The Observer
A thriller that really does thrill- partly because we care about its protagonists, and partly because Minette Walters has an enormous talent for old-fashioned story-telling.
- Spectator
A thoughtful and accomplished thriller.
- Daily Telegraph
Walters has succeeded in uniting the traditional crime narrative with a distressing and effective account of the private cruelties that can flourish amidgeneral mayhem. In doing so, she takes the genre to a deeper level.
- The Independent
This is high octane, on-the-edge stuff, at which Walters excels . . . The Devil' s Feather [is] engrossing reading.
- The Times (London)

From the Hardcover edition.


Intriguing. . . . Insightful. . . . A worthy rival to P.D. James and Ruth Rendell. -- People
She takes the suspense novel into new territory.
-- New York Times Book Review
Walters gracefully balances crowd-pleasing theatrics with a wickedly ambiguous ending. -- Entertainment Weekly
Terrifying. . . . [A] scary thriller. -- The New Yorker
Author Bio
Minette Walters is England's bestselling female crime writer. She has written 11 novels and has won the CWA John Creasey Award, the Edgar Allan Poe Award and two CWA Gold Daggers for Fiction. Minette Walters lives in Dorset with her husband and two children.