I am a pretty consistent reader of James Patterson. However, for the purposes of honesty, I get his books from the library because I don’t find him good enough to buy and keep in my library. He’s “mind candy” – simple, fast-paced, detective and mystery- oriented adventures that can be read in about two to three days and easily left behind. Nice escapism, but nothing super memorable.
“Killer Instinct” is a follow-up to “Murder Games” (also co-written with Howard Roughan), published back in June, 2017. The first book introduced Dr. Dylan Reinhart, an Ivy league professor and published expert on criminal behavior who becomes directly involved in a series of serial killings in New York when he is recruited by Elizabeth Needham, an aggressive NYPD detective in charge of the investigation. Together, they form a uniquely successful partnership while successfully catching a deadly serial killer.
The second book, “Killer Instinct”, starts off with the murder of a respected Ivy League professor made to look like an accident. Elizabeth, in her new task role, is assigned to investigate and brings Dylan in to help her figure out how to analyze the evidence. However, her case takes a back seat when an extreme act of terrorism rocks New York city. A name on the casualty list brings Dylan’s secret CIA past back and exposes his family to deadly risk.
Again, Elizabeth and Dylan are brought together to try and stop a terrorist madman, known only as the Mudir, or the Governor, who plans to decimate their beloved city. As they race against time and an adversary that no textbook Dylan has ever written has prepared them for, they will need the help of others with special skills including a reluctant mayor; a secret computer hacker who’s drinking only strengthens his skills; Dylan’s old CIA boss who always hated him, and still does; Dylan’s retired father, and a legendary Mossad ghost agent.
Like a typical Patterson mystery, the plot is fast-paced with a lot of running around New York city as Dylan and Elizabeth try to find and capture the terrorist leader and members of his different cells. As the mystery unfolds, Dylan’s secret background is revealed including his various assignments and relationships with several agents who worked with him. I was especially drawn into the character of Sadira Yavari, a mysterious killer who plays a key role in the storyline. Although most of the plotline follow’s Patterson’s usual developments, there a couple of fresh twists that make the outcome a bit more interesting than usual.
Even though the terrorist angle started off a bit cliché and worn, the multiple arcs helped provide some complexity and creativity to the story, and there was the usual tension filled moments of action and violence that is essential to Patterson’s formula. And although the storytelling suffered a bit from jumping around and being choppy, the pacing still moved along at Patterson’s machine-gun rapid-fire style, with several twists and turns along the way.
It seems like the first book focused more on Elizabeth’s character and the second one focused on Dylan and his background. However, what is interesting to me is that the enjoyment of “Killer Instinct” was provided more from the creative quality of the secondary characters that Elizabeth and Dylan interacted with, including Julian, Foxx, Dylan’s father, the Prophet, and of course, Sadira. They were really the glue that gave the story depth and made it interesting throughout.
Overall, this book was an enjoyable, “mind candy” read. Not his best, nor his worst. Like most of his, a solid formula that provides a nice weekend escape.