Geiger weiß genau, wie man einen Menschen bricht. Er zählt zu den besten Verhörexperten weltweit. Aber Geiger hat Moral. Schwache Menschen verhört er nicht - und das ist der Grund, warum er abgetaucht ist: Bei seinem letzten Auftrag hat er sich mit der Zielperson verbündet und einen gegnerischen Agenten verkrüppelt.
Vielleicht hätte er den Mann besser getötet. Denn der ist ebenfalls ein Folterprofi, allerdings ohne Moral. Und ihm schießt nur ein Gedanke durch den Kopf. Geigers Tod.
Τέλειωσα και τη συνέχεια του Ιεροεξεταστή και μπορώ να πω ότι μου άρεσε κι αυτό. Όχι όμως όσο το πρώτο. Δεν είχε την γρήγορη πλοκή και τις συνεχόμενες ανατροπές του πρώτου. Ίσως γιατί ο συγγραφέας θέλησε να αναφέρει λεπτομέρειες του πρώτου βιβλίου για να βάλει στο κλίμα τον αναγνώστη, γι αυτό και άργησε πολύ να μπεί στη δράση. Όμως στο δεύτερο βιβλίο φαίνεται η πιό μεστή και βελτιωμένη γραφή του πρωτοεμφανιζόμενου αυτού συγγραφέα. Κάνει φοβερή ψυχολογική ανάλυση των ηρώων που νομίζω ότι αυτό κυριαρχεί και που εμένα προσωπικά με κράτησε μέχρι τέλους. Γιατί και τα δυο βιβλία δεν θέλεις να τα αφήσεις. Θέλεις να μάθεις τι θα γίνει με αυτόν τον τόσο παράξενα γοητευτικό βασανιστή, που θέλεις να τον πάρεις μια αγκαλίτσα να τον παρηγορήσεις τον καημενούλι κι ας ξέρεις ότι είναι μετρ του νυστεριού. Και να προσθέσω ότι ο συγγραφέας είχε μια τέλεια ιδέα για να απογειώσει τον αναγνώστη και δεν το έκανε. Παρ όλα αυτά με κράτησε.
Geiger ist ein Fachmann darin, aus widerspenstigen Leuten die Wahrheit herauszubekommen. Doch als er sich weigert, ein Kind zu foltern, bringt er mächtige Feinde gegen sich auf. Allen voran den Folterexperten Dalton, der Geigers Moralvorstellungen nicht teilt, aber ähnlich gekonnt wie Geiger die Wahrheit mit Einsatz von Gewalt herausfinden kann. Bei ihrer letzten Begegnung wurden sie beide schwer verletzt. Als Geiger sich erholt hat und wieder in der Öffentlichkeit auftaucht, erscheint auch Dalton auf dem Plan – mit dem einzigen Ziel, Rache an Geiger zu nehmen.
So fand ich’s:
Ich habe mich über den Rückblick auf Band 1 gefreut, denn die Handlung von „Der Experte“ basiert auf dem, was in „Der Spezialist“ passiert ist, auch wenn die beiden Bücher nicht ausdrücklich als Serie ausgewiesen sind. Man muss den ersten Teil auch nicht unbedingt lesen, weil die Ereignisse ausführlich genug rekapituliert werden, aber es wäre schade drum, sich den tollen Thriller entgehen zu lassen.
Die Handelnden sind im Grunde die selben, wie sie schon in „Der Spezialist“ vorkommen, von denen man besonders den Jungen Ezra schnell lieb gewinnt. Die Hauptperson ist Geiger, der eine wirklich einzigartige Persönlichkeit darstellt. Ich liebe die stoische Abgeklärtheit Geigers, sein vorausschauendes Denken, seine vermeintliche Emotionslosigkeit, denn wenn man genau hinsieht, ist er gar nicht so ohne Gefühle. Er weiß nur nicht wirklich, wie man sie äußert. Man bekommt mit, wie die Menschen auf ihn reagieren. Man sieht ihn handeln, nimmt an seinen Überlegungen teil. Aber man kann ihn ganz schwer greifen – und das ist auch das Gefühl, das er bei den Leuten im Buch hinterlässt, auf die er trifft. Und doch scheint er nicht unsympathisch zu wirken. Und je mehr man in die Vergangenheit Geigers blickt, desto mehr nimmt er einen für sich ein und desto mehr fühlt man mit ihm. Ich mag ihn. Eine geniale Figur.
Zuerst schreitet die Handlung eher gemächlich voran. Ein bisschen mehr Action hätte mir im ersten Teil schon gut gefallen. Man hat das Gefühl, langsame und gründliche Vorbereitungen zu beobachten, ohne dass man wüsste, worauf das hinauslaufen soll. Doch als dann das Setting vorbereitet ist und jeder seine Pläne gemacht hat, entdeckt man als Leser genauso wie die Personen im Buch, dass alles doch nicht so kommt, wie sie sich das ausgerechnet haben. Es gibt unerwartete Wendungen und echte Überraschungen und neben Geigers Persönlichkeit packte mich die Handlung dann doch und ließ mir mehr als einmal den Mund offenstehen.
Thriller bedienen sich manchmal einer fast schon zu simplen Sprache, doch das kann man Smith nicht vorwerfen. Er schafft schöne Bilder und subtile Spannung, lässt Emotionen entstehen und einen in menschliche Abgründe fallen.
Wenn die Handlung sich um die Auseinandersetzung zweiter Folterer dreht, dann wird natürlich auch ein bisschen gefoltert. Doch darin liegt nicht der Schwerpunkt des Buches und ich fand es auch nicht allzu brutal, aber ich bin auch nicht empfindlich, was das angeht.
„Der Experte“ muss sich hinter dem ersten Teil „Der Spezialist“ nicht verstecken und für Fans von Thrillern, die nicht von Haudrauf-Action sondern von subtileren, aber dennoch packenden Psychospielchen bestimmt werden, kann ich beide Bücher empfehlen!
dark thriller but felt in parts it stretched the imagination a bit and the author got bogged down with the plot and felt the ending was a bit rushed felt the author could of expanded the ending more than what it was.
Was mich am ersten Teil so begeistert hat, war die Art der Hauptperson Geiger. Er verdient sein Geld damit, Menschen zu foltern und so Informationen für seine Auftraggeber zu beschaffen. Dabei geht es ihm aber nie um die Befriedigung irgendwelcher skurrilen Bedürfnisse, sondern er lehnt das Töten ab und hält sich strikt an seine Moral. Das war mal was anderes.
Bevor man dem zweiten Teil liest, in dem sich Geiger eigentlich zur Ruhe gesetzt hat und Möbel baut, sollte man den ersten Teil kennen. Dieser baut nämlich auf den Vorgänger auf und man würde vieles nicht verstehen.
Ich war sofort wieder in der Geschichte drin. Der Fokus ist diesmal anders gesetzt, eben weil Geiger eigentlich gar nicht mehr seinem alten Beruf nachgeht, aber manchmal spielt das Leben dann doch anders als geplant.
Das sorgt dafür, dass es wieder sehr spannend wird. Geiger und die alten Bekannten müssen sich nämlich seinem härtesten Gegner Dalton, der absolut keine Skrupel kennt und nur das Ziel verfolgt, Geiger zu vernichten. Mehr verrate ich zum Inhalt aber nicht.
Gut gefallen hat mir, dass man mehr über Geigers Vergangenheit und seine Kindheit erfährt. Das erklärt, warum er sich so verhält, wie er sich verhält. Außerdem macht ihn das sehr menschlich und zeigt eine Seite, die man im ersten Teil nur ganz gering erkennen konnte.
Super fand ich auch, dass man wieder verschiedene Perspektiven hatte. Auch die Schauplätze wechseln, sodass keine Langweile aufkommt.
Für schwache Nerven ist das Buch nichts. Gerade gegen Ende wird es doch sehr brutal, es gibt einige überraschende Wendungen, mit denen man gar nicht rechnen konnte.
Though I couldn't put my finger on quite what it was for the first hundred or so pages I felt there was something I just wasn't entirely getting about this book. However it wasn't until having written my draft review and read some other reviews that I discovered that The Confessor was in fact part two in a series - the first being The Inquisitor. Something that could have explained my feeling that something was amiss? Who knows?
Anyway, call me old fashioned but I kind of like my heroes to be heroes (even if they are slightly flawed) and my villains to, likewise, be villains, none of this anti-hero business.
Every inch what I'd describe as an anti-hero, Geiger is an Information Retrieval specialist (a politically correct term for a torturer who excels in getting information out of people) who despite the author exploring his tormented past remained an unbelievably mundane character to read.
Not that it was only Geiger I found to be tedious, equally mundane was the writing. Painfully slow and plodding, I'm afraid that I constantly found my mind wondering.
This book is too long and often waaaay overwritten (so many similes, so many adjectives), but the pages kept turning as I raced through this book.
I like the premise and the main character, Geiger, who is an unemotional, unknowable, brilliant "information retrieval specialist" (ahem, torturer). In the first book, he comes up against a line he didn't know he had--torturing a kid--and basically burns up his life and a whole lot of other peoples' lives, too. In this sequel, he's leaving that life behind, building furniture, and trying to recover some semblance of self.
But the man he thought he put down returns and his pissed and crazy and will do anything to go a second round with Geiger. And off we go to Paris. There's more torture, of course, but there are revelations about Geiger's past and maybe, just maybe, there's a tiny bit of humanity in there and maybe, just maybe, he'll finally get to explore what that could mean for him.
It's a fun, tense, somewhat gruesome ride. I wish there were more in the series!
A good book with lots of action. There was one large fault to the book but it was my own. With the time between reading the first book in the series to reading this one, I felt like I was just getting into the series. I had forgotten a little bit of what happened at the end of the first book and almost had to catch up once I started the second book. Geiger is presumed dead and he works with that until he feels it safe to make himself known. He gets asked to go to Paris with the CIA for a mission. There things go awry and old enemies come back into the forefront. There is also betrayal but since Geiger is working with new people it could be anyone of them.
This is the second book in the "Geiger" series; the first was the Inquisitor, which was amazing. This story was also very good but just not quite as good as the first book. I don't understand why I haven't seen any other books from this author since this one which was published several years ago. These are very rough psychological thrillers. Geiger is an Information Retrieval specialist; in other words he tortures people to get information. He had quit the business after the end of the first book in the series but then he gets lured back into it when his friends need his help. These are not for the faint of heart.
Son 20-30 sayfadaki ters köşenin hatrına 4 yıldız veriyorum. Kitabın geri kalanı, ilk kitaptan bildiğimiz gibi bol aksiyonlu macera üzerine. İçinde polis olmayan polisiyelerden. Oraya koş buraya koş, silahlar, kan revan. Ama şöyle de bir tespitim var ki, insan okumaya devam ettikçe eskiden çok sevdiği kitaplar ya da türler tat vermemeye başlayabiliyor. Oldum olası polisiye kitaplara bayılırım ama son zamanlarda 'budur' diyebileceğim çok az polisiye kitaba denk geldim. Bu kitap da maalesef 'budur' dediklerimden biri değil. Yine de kitapsız kalırsanız okunabilir. =)
3,5 ⭐️ Erst als ich schon angefangen hab zu lesen, hab ich herausgefunden, dass es Band 2 ist. Dementsprechend habe ich die ersten 100 Seiten auch nicht wirklich was verstanden. Was die ebenfalls verstärkt hat, ist die Tatsache, dass es die Erzählperspektiven ohne ‚Vorankündigung‘ teilweise sehr oft einfach wechseln und ich nicht sofort gemerkt habe, dass nun eine andere Figur denkt/spricht/handelt. Hat mich gut unterhalten, überlege ob ich Band 1 überhaupt noch lesen soll weil ich ja jetzt weiß wie es ausgeht.
Aussortiert Sehr sexualisiert, sehr männlich geschrieben Sehr gewalttätig und viele detaillierte Gewaltbeschreibungen (diese gut, aber an manchen Stellen wirkt es so erzwungen, noch mehr Gewalt einzubringen) Teilweise Augenrollen Momente, in denen der plot Twist einfach nur mich dazu bringt mir die Hand an die Stirn zu klatschen. Plot Twists auch meist vorhersehbar ab einem gewissen Punkt Spannungsbogen semi gut Sehr philosophische malerische Beschreibungen von Erinnerungen und Szenerien, die der Spannung nicht gerade helfen. Viel französisch, das auch nicht immer übersetzt wird
A good thriller, more action-packed than The Inquisitor. It felt weird, though, to see Geiger make mistakes - I mean he was always so sure if someone was lying or not, and then, all of a sudden... And I'm not talking about Dewey - in that case, it was the migraine - but later??... Certain details were hard to believe. Other than that, not a bad read.
Great main character, different from almost anyone else. Good storyline, and I thought I'd anticipated the ending, but I hadn't got it quite right, which I was pleased about. Hope there's a third one to come.
Well that took a while. But glad I didn't give up on it. The last scene was worth it. Geiger was worth it. This guy knows how to write. I cannot believe there is not more. There's got to be a story on Ezra Matheson. That would be amazing.
Ridiculously cliched torture porn. Look, the "plot" consists of Bad Guy using Good Guy's friends as hostages to make Good Guy show up for a showdown, as it were. Holy every single freaking revenge novel / film ever made, Batman. Good Guy is (natch) the strong, silent type. He would make the outlaw, Josey Wales, seem talkative. We are treated to his backstory, which turns out, like the ending, to have a large slice of the Saw franchise in its DNA and could be read as excusing Good Guy's choice of career -- torturing people. And he is almost superhuman except for one weakness -- in this case, debilitating migraines. And there is the required exposition about how similar -- yet different in his pure heart and motives -- Good Guy is from Bad Guy. Seen anything original here? Nope, me either. It's not even well-written. The ham-handed repetition of the scent of lavender, the frankly stupid action sequence on the roofs of Paris, the weak attempt at a twist in the end . Typically in these books, there are three kinds of women: Housewife/mother, hooker, and a solitary female deviating from those norms. At the end of the book, that female falls for the hero and either a) betrays him or b) sacrifices her life for him. This book has a housewife and a hooker. Look in the spoiler to find out about how the femme fatale makes out. At least since since Abu Ghraib, American media has been whitewashing torture as OK when the right people are being tortured. This book is just another sorry step along that path, glorifying a torturer as a person of power and torture as an empowering experience. It's like reading a pro-rape novel written from the point of view of the rapist. It's about sick f**ks by a sick f**k for sick f**ks. Zero stars, negative stars. I picked this up because I read widely, for work and pleasure. I finished it because I wanted to see if it ever deviated from the stereotypical path (it didn't, ). I am a little bit less human for having read it. Don't make the same mistake.
Well that first chapter was a shock! This is not for the faint hearted but is still a thrilling journey into a world I luckily know nothing about. I hadn't read the first book of the series and this did I think stop me from understanding some plot points but certainly did not make it any less spooky and chilling! Be aware that there are scalpels, giant hornets and much more in the first few pages.....
the story in a nutshell -
Cold, emotionless and with an innate ability to recognize lies, Geiger was the best of the best in the field of Information Retrieval. Until he was asked to break his only rule and do the unthinkable - to torture a child. Something broke in Geiger's neatly controlled mind, opening up a flood of terrible memories long kept at bay. And now Geiger is missing, presumed dead.
But, with no body ever found, there are a number of people invested in finding out the truth. One of those people is Harry Boddicker, Geiger's old handler and friend. Another is his bitter rival, Dalton, who is determined to find Geiger and extract a final confession from him, before carrying out his deadly revenge.
The setting -
Taking place between NEw York and Paris and then back again, you get to visit the cities dark underbellies and you see the dark side of not only the streets and the environment but more importantly the people hunting Geiger and of course Dalton.
Brooklyn for example -
'Brooklyn was a mongrel jumble of edifice, ethnicity and class. Every turn seemed to transport him to someplace unconnected and alien'
There are misty odors, dismal dark streets and a sense of doom which pervades much of this novel yet it is captivating and pushes you along on one heck of a ride. Just best not to have eaten first.
When the novel moves to Paris, the action is set against a backdrop which makes it even more of a sinister tone. Even the weather is misbehaving -
'[He] watched Matheson come out of the lobby and head towards Rue de Rennes. Overhead the clouds were sliding by in blockish clumps...’
I really don’t want to give away too much of the plot as well, you are in for quite a ride and I don’t just mean from NYC to Paris and back again although this distance and sharp contrast in people and cultures really adds to the mix.
It has left its mark and I don’t just mean the scalpel.
A long of strong points carry on from the inquisitor, from the pacing to the descriptive writing style. Unfortunately the ending alone took this book from being a 5 star to a 3 for me.
I don't think one Character in this book came out better than they went in. Geiger lost body parts and a love interest in exchange for memories of a dead parent and 'perhaps' some deeper connection to his feelings. Erza lost his father, Zanni-Victor-Dewie-Dalton-Matherson-all die, and perhaps the one who came out the best was Harry was tortured, accidentally murders someone and might have reconciled with his ex-wife.
The real letdown for me was Zanni's betrayal whilst normally I would say was an interesting twist was compromised by the fact that we had multiple moments of reading from her viewpoint and it was so far out of her character that I found it hard to believe. I hate to say it but I can't think of anything that would have changed had she not been involved aside from informing Victor of the kidnapping, he still would have gone to Dalton's cottage, still would have been set free by Harry.
I'm being really heavy handed in my review with this book, not because it was bad but because it was not. The writer still has a great writing style and followed on strong from his first book but the end experience felt half-hearted and surprise moments were there for the sake of them not for what fit the story best, which sadly the ruined the experience for me.
I will look forward to reading other books from mr Smith but I think this series was better of concluded with the first book.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This book was clumsily written. Cliche with a core concept that could've been interesting if the writing/editing was smoother. Nice twist but unnecessarily foreshadowed. Victor's action at the end didn't make any sense - if you're being choked from two different directions by mattress lining, and you have a knife, you don't fucking throw it at one of the two assailants. You cut the mattress line that is choking you. Very deus ex machina and not enough justification for how everything ends up.
I hated how the female protagonist had a "you hatin' cause I'm a woman" attitude, and that her anger defined her. Mainly because that was the only way she ever showed her anger. Also, her line about wanting her two favorite things before she died (chocolate and sex), and how she already had chocolate... how cliche and two-dimensional can this book get.
The second book about Geiger, and it was just as good as the first one. The story is kind of messed up, with two professional torturers having a go at each other. But that is also what makes it so original and why it’s such a refreshing read. So many thrillers are so alike that you can barely tell them apart. You won’t have that issue with these books. They’re dark, but that darkness doesn’t take over the story. They’re fast paced and clever and they make you question your own sympathies, because Geiger is a character you probably shouldn’t like, but you can’t help yourself from sympathizing with him anyway. And I personally wouldn’t mind if we’d see more of Geiger in the future. Mark Allen Smith will certainly be on my authors-to-watch list.
Within a few pages, The Confessor takes you to a dark, sordid, terrifying place. Behind the sanitised name of IR - or Information Retrieval - is a horrifying world of brutal torture. There are two IR agents, one of whom appears to be a good guy and one a villain, but which is which, and can a man who uses such brutal methods really be a hero, even if it is all done for the greater good and sanctioned by the government?
Geiger, the alchemist of pain, does it again. Another spectacularly detailed installment of the inquisitor's life. Gripping from start to finish, each twist pulls you in tighter. I can't even imagine how much time it must take to come up with the most intricate details that Mark Allen Smith uses to make you feel wholly a part of the story. This series has made me rethink the five star ratings I have given a number of other books I've read in the last few months.
I loved The Inquisitor and hoped this book would be as good. It was.. We got to learn more about Geiger and his past, and how he views the world. He evolved a lot in this book. The twist at the end with Dalton turning the tables on Geiger was great, I didn't see that coming. I look forward to reading more books by this author!
He was the best interrogator every. He left to get out. Then they found him. They knew how to get him back. His friends were the bait. He had to get them back. Then he was betrayed. He should have seen it coming. He was slipping. Now he was the victim and he was the one to do cutting on his own body.
I was so confused at the start over which character was which. The book is okay, I wouldn't purchase it for a travel read, stick with Patterson, Steele, Roberts, blah blah. It was soft thriller porn, filled with unnecessary thoughts, a lot of little nothings to slow the plot down. While it wasn't the best thriller it definitely wasn't the worst