Genre: Crime/Thriller
Description:
Meet Truman Ferris Pinter, a self-confessed rapist and murderer,
currently residing on death row, hours away from his execution.
Author:
Les Edgerton is the author of fifteen books. He is an ex-con and
served two years for a single charge of burglary, reduced from 182, two
strong-arm robberies, an armed robbery, and a count of possession with intent
to deal. Today, he's completely reformed. Prior to this Les served in the U.S.
Navy as a cryptographer during the Cuban Crisis and the beginning of the
Vietnam War.
After making parole, Les obtained a B.A. from Indiana University and
then received his MFA in Writing (Fiction) from Vermont College. He teaches
workshops nationwide on writing. Born in Texas, Les now lives in Indiana with
his family.
You can learn more about the author at his blog.
Appraisal:
If you’ve read the author bio you’ll probably appreciate that I
approached The Rapist with a degree
of trepidation – Les Edgerton is one scary dude. In addition the subject matter
would probably be difficult. The cover, of a woman’s face, eyes sightless, is
haunting.
And I was right, it isn’t an easy read. It’s one of those stories you
push away after finishing it, then pull it back again and look at it in a whole
new light. Clearly Edgerton likes to jolt his readers. In fact, afterwards I
felt a bit grubby having been in the mind of the main character, Truman Ferris
Pinter, for so long.
Socially inept (a gross understatement) and incredibly self-important,
Truman is a strange guy. At the outset we meet Truman in prison, he’s on death
row having been found guilty of the rape and murder of a young woman. Through
the initial part of the story Truman admits and even justifies his actions in a
quite unique voice. He feels morally justified in his actions because of who
she is and who he is. He is a class above.
Here’s an example from the outset:
He will
inhale you, devour you, eat the pulp of your soul and spit out the husk. Behind
his eyes lies nothing save the fevered light of unholy candles.
And this is Truman describing himself. Whilst awaiting his sentence
for death in a matter of hours time (which adds another layer of tension) he
recounts the situation which put him there and we learn about Truman’s life and
experiences – some of which are strange – before he goes through a personal
change. I won’t say more, you’ll need to discover these for yourself.
Should I feel sorry for Truman? Really I shouldn’t, but eventually I
became drawn to the oddball. It was a strange experience.
The writing is very sharp, the prose as rich and wealthy as a
billionaire. I stayed up late for three nights in a row to finish The Rapist, only going to bed when I
literally couldn’t keep my eyes open, it’s that compelling a story.
I haven’t picked up anything quite like The Rapist before. I probably never will again.
Buy now
from: Amazon US Amazon UK
FYI:
A rape scene but not overly graphic.
Added for
Reprise Review: The Rapist by Les
Edgerton was a nominee in the Thriller category for B&P 2014 Readers'
Choice Awards. Original review ran November 17, 2013
Rating:
***** Five Stars
Reviewed
by: Keith Nixon
Approximate
word count: 45 -50,000 words
2 comments:
AL, what a truly nice surprise! Thank you so very much for reposting this. This was the hardest book I've ever written and I felt like I was taking a lot of chances writing it. That you liked it and still do means an awful lot to me. Thank you. Blue skies, Les
Sorry, meant to say thank you to Keith Nixon!
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