Vengeful Sheriff Buck White matches wits with the devilishly clever criminal, Ivan Norodny, as he tracks the man responsible for the murder of his ex-wife and investigates a series of disappearances and killings in Miami
Joseph Koenig is an author of hard-boiled fiction. A former crime reporter, he won critical acclaim and an Edgar nomination for his first novel, Floater (1986), a grimly violent story of con men, cops, and killers in the Florida Everglades. His next two novels were Little Odessa (1988), a darkly comic tale of life in New York’s Ukrainian underworld, and Smugglers Notch (1989), a story of brutal murder in snowbound Vermont. Koenig’s fourth novel, the groundbreaking Brides of Blood (1993), won strong reviews for its elegant treatment of police procedure in Islamic Iran.
For nearly two decades after Brides of Blood, Koenig did not publish. But in 2012 the pulp-style publishing house Hard Case Crime released his newest novel, False Negative, a rollicking mystery about a journalist who, like Koenig once did, writes for true-crime magazines.
Great thriller. I loved the backdrop of Florida--Hollywood, Homestead and Everglades areas--helped you create nice imagery. His writing gave you a visual picture of the what and where. I would have given this 4.5 starts but I do not have that option. If you are looking for a thriller/mystery, this is a good read.
When a series of wealthy women are found floating in Florida’s Everglades and bayous, fear assails this once peaceful community. The Miami police cannot point to a killer with any certainty, and the longer it takes them to solve the serial murders, more women wind up dead: floating in the swamplands like the rest of the killer’s victims. Once Sheriff Buck White’s ex-wife is found amongst the victims however, his vow for revenge sends him on a relentless search for a killer who feels no remorse.
Koenig is a former crime reporter with a tight grip on the dark realities of Florida’s crime history. Once contributor to Front Page Detective, New Black Mast Quarterly, and other true crime journals, Koenig now writes thriller fiction with relentless truth and an avid understanding of the classic serial killer. Floater is Koenig’s debut book, and was nominated in 1987 for an Edgar award for Best First Novel.
Black sheriff in Florida everglades country must find his wife's murderer. But most of book concerns suave conman/kidnapper/murderer who preys on rich women and likes to drown them in the bathtub. Sheriff eventually kills him, but he was not the killer of the sheriff's wife. Erratic.