A rookie FBI agent. An escalating killing spree. Can he save a small town from a madman on a rampage?
New York, 1993. Cole Chambers is determined to protect the innocent. Bent on overcoming a tragic history rooted in flames, the FBI agent relentlessly pursues justice while struggling not to surrender to his fears. But the rookie profiler finds himself tested when a murderer turns an amusement park into a gruesome display of four bloody corpses.
Linking the horrific scene to apocalyptic threats from the Book of Revelation, an alarmed Chambers works with his seasoned partner to chase down cryptic clues. But as the investigation triggers an inferno of personal trauma, the precocious agent fights an internal battle while desperately trying to predict the slayer’s twisted visions.
Can he stop a zealous killer from unleashing Armageddon?
The Doomsday Butcher is the heart-pounding first book in the Cole Chambers Crime Thriller series. If you like perfectly flawed protagonists, deep psychological conflict, and nonstop suspense, then you’ll love S.E. Stitcher’s dark mystery.
Buy The Doomsday Butcher for a macabre prophecy today!
S.E. Stitcher is the author of the Cole Chambers FBI Profiler Thrillers series.
He aims to write entertaining stories featuring bone-chilling villains and the heroes that hunt them.
He currently lives with his wife and young daughter in Tokyo, Japan where they enjoy spending time with his daughter's imaginary friends while dining on sushi, tempura, and seafood pizza. Well, his family enjoys seafood pizza anyway.
A rookie FBI agent, Cole Chambers is on his first big case with a veteran agent, Kozlowski, trying to catch a serial killer obsessed with Doomsday and the Apocalypse. This book was action-packed, filled with great characters, and just when you think the killer has been identified, you're thrown a curve ball. This is the first in a new series. Definitely check it out if you enjoy FBI thrillers!
The Doomsday Butcher, book 1 in the Cole Chambers series, introduces us to Cole, A rookie profiler whose first case turns out to be a crazy one. Bodies, butchered to symbolize the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, are found in an amusement park, setting off a massive and surprisingly unpredictable manhunt. The writing is well composed, with good characters, A thoughtful plot, fast pacing and several unexpected twists and turns. Overall, 4/5 stars, highly recommended for fans of serial killer and crime thrillers!
What a fun and twisty ride! I love a good profiler story and this one didn’t disappoint. Despite a few minor grammar errors, the only thing I could have hoped more for was the story to be longer because the author’s descriptions were mouthwatering! I cringed in disgust at the vividly described crime scenes and swooned at the lyrical prose strewn throughout the pages. I will definitely be continuing this series.
A very enjoyable, fast paced thriller with intriguing characters. Cole was a rookie FBI agent with a traumatic past assigned with an older partner to find a serial killer determined to unleash Armageddon. Very suspenseful, kept my attention throughout and I liked the characters. Looking forward to the next book.
The Doomsday Butcher by S.E. Stitcher Release Day: February 26th ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️✨4.5/5
This is a dark, pulse-pounding thriller that doesn’t let up. From the first grisly crime scene—a nightmarish tableau in an amusement park—to the relentless chase for a killer obsessed with apocalyptic prophecy, this book had me hooked.
Cole Chambers is a rookie FBI profiler with a past that still burns, both literally and figuratively. As he hunts down a murderer leaving cryptic, biblical clues, his own demons threaten to consume him. The tension is razor-sharp, the psychological depth gripping, and the stakes sky-high. The ’90s setting adds an extra layer of grit, making every twist and turn feel even more immersive.
If you love thrillers with flawed but determined protagonists, eerie religious undertones, and a story that keeps you guessing, this one’s for you. I’ll definitely be grabbing the next book in the series!
Honestly I’m surprised at how good this book was. At only 188 pages, this left no room for filler so right at the beginning it was ‘go go go’ and the pacing moved at a breakneck speed.
This book follows an FBI agent who investigates a string of murders based off of the Book of Revelations. Every murder is gory and grotesque and that opening few pages sets the stage for what’s to come.
It’s grisly. It’s dark. It’s fun. It’s written well and it never once got boring. This was such a fun read and highly entertaining. I’ll definitely read the entire series as each book is around the same length.
Wow, what a book! I love a good murder mystery, and this one didn’t let me down. If you are a fan of Criminal Minds or CSI, you will enjoy this book. The police team characters really complimented each other. Although I did figure out the killer before it was revealed, I never would have guessed the motive behind it. What a twist of events. I look forward to see what Cole and the other characters getup to in the next book Im the series!
"The Doomsday Butcher" by S.E. Stitcher was an absolute page-turner. It kept me hooked from start to finish, with biblical references that added depth and sparked thoughtful reflection. A truly thought-provoking read that I would highly recommend.
I won this book. As I started reading I thought to myself, this is so good! I actually did a search to see if this was a real news story sometime and I had missed it. I read this in just a day. It was gruesome but so good. It follows Cole and the FBI around. It follows Cole’s life around a little too closely. But in the end they catch a deranged killer. I never saw the ending coming.
Any fan of crime thrillers will tell you that an antagonist who uses delusion and grandiose theatrics to commit their deeds will instantly spark a reader’s interest. The four riders of the apocalypse? Yes, please.
The local police here certainly aren’t equipped to deal with a massacre of this type, so in steps FBI agent Cole Chambers, who has his own demons to contend with while hunting this Angel of Justice.
The main characters here feel like they have depth, and the plot is solid. There's definitely a high-stakes feeling throughout that creates a sort of pressure and pace that goes beyond just the "we need to stop this serial killer" due to the well-developed doomdsay theme that the 'Angel of Justice' employs. Stitcher did a good job of crafting this concept. This is a great first book to the series!
- a nice little easy read - I’ve been on a big profiler kick so I really enjoyed this - I like the set up - each chapter starts with the day and time, it’s very nice and allows for a much more broad picture of what’s happening - I was 100% not expecting it to be Sammy in the end, but I liked that there was a twist instead of it being straight foward
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Hmmmm....I adore police procedural books and thought I was really going to enjoy this one but I really just didn't it was just a little weird and I also had the audio and that was terrible. I should have read more of it with my eyeballs or DNFed this one.
Definitely a fast-paced story. All the pieces were there but it felt like it went way too quickly. I feel like this could have easily been twice as long in the hands of a more experienced author.
I definitely enjoyed the read. The ending made me laugh, which you'd probably find highly unacceptable until you read it. Serial killer. Young FBI profiler, struggling with trusting his gut. Up and coming Journalist coming in to step on some toes. All put together for a faced one.
This book works best when it treats profiling not as genius but as pressure, and that choice gives the novel more weight than its violent premise might suggest. S.E. Stitcher is writing within a familiar tradition of FBI procedurals, with ritual murders, coded messages, and a killer who wants an audience as much as a victim. What matters is that the book understands the machinery of that tradition and keeps it moving with discipline. The 1993 setting helps because the investigation depends less on instant access than on inference, interviews, legwork, and the uneasy confidence of people making decisions before they can be certain. The opening Dreamland tableau is designed to shock, but the novel does not simply live off that image. A lesser version of this story would keep escalating the grotesque until the case became only a sequence of displays. Stitcher instead builds the murders into a system that Cole Chambers has to read, and the book is at its strongest when it lets that reading remain provisional. The apocalyptic language could easily have become decorative menace; here it functions as both clue and disguise, a way for violence to pretend it has moral architecture. Cole is a useful center because his damage is not treated as automatic depth. His fear of fire is concrete, recurring, and inconvenient, which makes it more persuasive than the usual tragic backstory attached to a competent investigator. His pairing with Barry Kozlowski gives the novel a steadier emotional spine than the plot alone could provide. Kozlowski is not merely the seasoned partner there to explain the rules; he becomes a measure of professional steadiness against which Cole’s instincts can sharpen. Officer Fields also earns her place, particularly because the book allows local intelligence to matter. The novel is not immune to bluntness. A few exchanges state what the surrounding structure has already made plain, and some secondary figures are drawn with broader strokes than the central partnership. There are also moments when the clues arrive with a tidiness that slightly reduces the danger of misreading them. Still, the pacing is firm, and the late return to Dreamland gives the book its real test: whether Cole can separate justice from vengeance when the case finally stops being abstract. People in this novel read scripture, bodies, scars, and each other, and the cost of reading wrongly is never theoretical. As a series opener, it establishes a lead character with room to deepen and a procedural framework sturdy enough to carry him. As a piece of constructed thriller fiction, it holds. That is not a small achievement.
‘I can’t believe this is my first real case’ – And on stage, Special Agent Cole Chambers!
Author S.E. Stitcher lives and writes in Japan, and while little is shared about his background, it is readily apparent that his genre of suspense saturated thrillers that explore ‘bone-chilling villains and the heroes that hunt them’ is growing in popularity. In just the past year his Cole Chambers FBI Profiler Thriller series includes five volumes - THE SALT LAKE SNATCHER, THE SLEEPY HOLLOW STRANGLER, THE BIG RIG RIPPER, THE LOS ANGELES LUNATIC, and of course this initial volume THE DOOMSDAY BUTCHER.
Stitcher’s mastery of suspense writing greets the reader on page one, a telephone call, in 1993, New York: ‘The tone of the caller’s voice set a shiver down Officer Amy Field’s spine. “I am the Angel of Justice, the Alpha and the Omega. Who is, who was, and who…’ Officer Fields couldn’t help but interrupt. She had just arrived at the station and wasn’t in the mood to interpret biblical phrases…’ After a series of brief tense moments this thriller explodes, and the initial adventure is distilled as follows: ‘New York, 1993. Criminal profiling is still a fledgling science—and Special Agent Cole Chambers is about to be thrown into the deep end. At dawn, the gates of an amusement park creak open to reveal the carousel turning. Four bodies ride the painted horses. One crowned in gold. One bound in barbed wire. One starved hollow. One nailed beneath the words: Behold, a pale horse! And its rider’s name was Death. The killer isn’t just murdering. He’s preaching. Fresh from Quantico and desperate to prove himself, Cole is paired with legendary law enforcer Barry “The Beast” Kozlowski to stop a zealot obsessed with fire-and-brimstone theology. And fire is the one thing Cole knows he can’t control. Years ago, flames left scars on his arm and stole his little sister. Now a maniac calling himself the Angel of Justice is reenacting the Book of Revelation—seal by seal, trumpet by trumpet. Each murder escalates. Each message grows clearer. And the next prophecy is already in motion. If Cole can’t master his own demons, the butcher will turn scripture into slaughter.’
Reading this excellent first volume involving ritualistic serial killers, psychological and suspenseful themes, and flawed heroes will likely result in addiction – of the most entertaining type. Very highly recommended!
The Doomsday Butcher follows rookie FBI profiler Cole Chambers as he is sent to Crestview, New York, where a killer calling himself the Angel of Justice is staging murders around Revelation. Cole is new, scarred by fire, and forced to read evil while trying not to let his own past burn through him. What I liked most was the atmosphere. Dreamland Amusement Park, the motel, the pub, the church, even the tanning salon all feel stained by the same sick light. The book has that damp 1993 crime thriller texture, with cigarettes, sirens, bad coffee, and a town slowly realizing the nightmare has chosen it. The opening carousel scene is especially vivid. Grotesque, theatrical, hard to shake. Cole works because he feels raw without being helpless, and Kozlowski brings a heavier, rougher presence beside him. The themes of faith twisted into spectacle and trauma answering trauma give the story more bite. My only issue was that some of the religious decoding felt a little too clearly explained, softening the mystery’s shadow. Still, this is a bloody, atmospheric first entry with real dread in its bones.
This thing moves like bad weather. First crime scene at Dreamland is sick, cleanly staged, and nasty enough to make the case feel urgent right away. Cole Chambers could have been the usual damaged FBI wonder boy, but the fire scar and the sister trauma actually matter to the story. They are not just slapped on there for flavor. Barry Kozlowski sold me too. Big mouth, hard edges, good instincts, and the kind of dialogue that sounds like cops and agents who have had too much coffee and not enough sleep. The killer is a nasty piece of work in the right way. The Revelation angle could have turned into costume shop nonsense, but most of it lands because the violence keeps getting worse and the clues stay tied to the hunt. I liked the 1993 setup as well. No magic phone work. No instant database miracle. Just pressure, legwork, and people making calls that might be wrong. What did not work? A bit of the prophecy explaining could have been trimmed, and one reporter motel bit went longer than it needed to. Still, the ending pays what it owes. No cheat. No soft landing. Read it if you like dark crime that actually delivers.
A dark, fast serial-killer thriller about a rookie FBI profiler chasing a Revelation-obsessed murderer through a small New York town in 1993. Love the creepy setup, especially the amusement park crime scene, which is basically “what if a Bible riddle had access to a carousel and absolutely no chill.” Cole Chambers is a solid lead: damaged, scared of fire for very good reasons, but still trying to do the job. His partnership with Kozlowski gives the book some needed bite and humor between all the blood and prophecy. The mystery moves quickly, the clues are nasty, and the whole thing has a very grim 90s crime-show feel, in a good way. Sometimes it leans a little hard into dramatic cop-thriller dialogue, but honestly, I was still turning pages. Be warned: graphic murder, torture, religious extremism, child abuse references, and a lot of deeply upsetting crime-scene imagery. Compelling, gruesome, weirdly fun, and definitely not a “read before bed unless you enjoy staring at the ceiling” situation.
Cole Chambers is a rookie FBI profiler sent to Crestview after an amusement park crime scene that basically screams nightmare fuel. The killer is staging murders around Revelation, and Cole has to chase the pattern while also dealing with the one thing he cannot keep neatly boxed away, fire. I was hooked from the Dreamland carousel scene. Horrible, yes. Effective, absolutely. What makes it work is that the book is not just clue, corpse, repeat. Cole has that raw young agent pressure, Kozlowski brings the gruff seasoned force, and Officer Fields is sharp enough that I kept wanting her in more scenes. The case has momentum, and the 1993 setting gives it that bar smoke, printouts, fried food and hard legwork texture I love in crime thrillers. Well a few lines lean a little big dramatic cop mode, and I sometimes connected pieces before the team did. Still, the pacing mostly barrels. Read if you like ritual killer thrillers, damaged profilers, biblical clues, and partners who bicker through the gloom. Nasty little ride.
Talk about an opening scene. If I saw that gruesome merry go round, I would have nightmares for weeks. Although I was very intrigued by the murders as they were really thought out. From the victims to how they died.
"With the new moon, comes the meteor of death"
There is a cast of characters. The local police with Chief Armstrong and Officer Fields and Agent Chambers and Agent Kozlowski. OMG the way that Chief Armstrong is so useless. All he is good for is delegating tasks to everyone, so that he has more free time to watch Days of Our Lives. Yet, Officer Fields, she is great. Agents Chamber and Kozlowski work well together.
The group is maybe a little slow in piecing everything together as there were a couple of times that I figured it out before they did. Yet, I still enjoyed this book. The pacing is good and kept moving along. I will read the next book in this series.
"Where the vice once sprang, a false profit draws his last breath"
The Doomsday Butcher: A Gripping Serial Killer Thriller with Apocalyptic Stakes is the first novel in the Cole Chambers FBI Profiler Thriller series by S.E. Stitcher. Agent Cole Chambers is paired up with a veteran agent, Barry Kozlowski, when he is called upon to find a killer who is playing out the book of Revelation. This psychopath keeps the agents busy as he acts out the violent fantasies of his version of Revelation. Not only was he fighting to find the killer, but a journalist was hot on the trail.
I found The Doomsday Butcher a high-intensity thriller. S.E. Stitcher’s writing resembles the series Criminal Minds. A team profiling a serial killer, which takes an evil twist multiple time. I love that the author takes the time to draw his reader in, then executes the ending with danger, precision, and humor. This is an excellent novel, and I look forward to continuing the Cole Chambers series.
Who is the mysterious caller claiming, "The Four Horsemen ride at Dreamland"? That question pulled me into The Doomsday Butcher by S. E. Stitcher right from the opening chapter.
I enjoyed following Officer Amy Fields as a chilling phone call leads to a disturbing investigation. The eerie setting of Dreamland Amusement Park and the biblical references create a creepy atmosphere that kept me curious about what was really going on.
S. E. Stitcher does a great job of building suspense without giving too much away. If you enjoy crime thrillers with dark mysteries, unsettling villains, and plenty of twists, The Doomsday Butcher is a gripping read.
Recommend for readers who like dark FBI thrillers with damaged hearts. Dark, tense, and more wounded than I expected. Cole Chambers is a new FBI profiler sent to Crestview after a killer turns biblical prophecy into staged murder, and the case keeps pulling at the burned places in his own past. The opening carousel scene is gruesome, but what stayed with me was the sadness under the spectacle. Cole’s fear of fire, Kozlowski’s rough steadiness, and the small town pressure give the book a human pulse beneath all the blood and scripture. The prose is direct and cinematic, with enough 1990s texture to make the investigation feel physical rather than slick. The pacing moves fast, sometimes almost too fast, and I wanted a little more room around a few emotional turns near the payoff. Still, the ending lands with heat, fear, and a real sense of choice.
Cole Chambers is an inexperienced FBI agent teamed with a older confident agent and they have a race against time to catch a serial killer who is using the Book of Revelation to leave clues as to where the next murder will take place. Cole has his own fears and history which gets in the way but he is learning from the other agents but is given a bit of leeway working alongside the local Police. He witnesses some horrible murders in the race to catch the person or persons responsible.It is a bit gruesome in places and you can see the author trying to build the character of Cole for future books but it is very readable but will they get there before all the murders have taken place or can they stop the murderer? They are running out of time.
A crisp and fast paced crime thriller. It's a novella and not much can be covered in a small novel as my experience tells me.
We have Cole Chambers, an fresh recruit to the BAU unit of the FBI with a tough history, and existing trauma of fires. Much like any other agent that you will find in myriad of other books written on the subject, he carries ghosts from the past which made him the man he is today while still trying to get away from their clutches.
The story spans, in the timeline of the book, for 4 days and they manage to catch a serial killer in that short span of time. I wouldn't even categorise the murderer with serial killers actually. In any case, this is a one time read, that you can finish on a plane journey.