An Evil Mind: A Novel

An Evil Mind: A Novel

by Chris Carter

Narrated by George Newbern

Unabridged — 11 hours, 40 minutes

An Evil Mind: A Novel

An Evil Mind: A Novel

by Chris Carter

Narrated by George Newbern

Unabridged — 11 hours, 40 minutes

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Overview

A prolific and ingenious serial killer is unmasked by a Los Angeles detective with a dark past of his own in this “roller coaster ride that will leave you breathless” by Top 10 Sunday Times (UK) bestselling author Chris Carter.

A freak accident in rural Wyoming leads the sheriff's department to arrest a man for a possible double homicide, but further investigations suggest a much more horrifying discovery: a serial killer who has been kidnapping, torturing, and mutilating victims all over the United States for at least twenty-five years.

The suspect claims he is a pawn in a huge labyrinth of lies and deception-but can he be believed?

The case is immediately handed over to the FBI, but this time they're forced to ask for help from ex-criminal behavior psychologist and lead detective with the Ultra Violent Crime Unit of the LAPD, Robert Hunter. As he begins interviewing the apprehended suspect, terrifying secrets are revealed, including the real identity of a killer so elusive that no one, not even the FBI, had any idea he existed...until now.

This dramatic and suspense-laden thriller, perfect for fans of Thomas Harris's classic The Silence of the Lambs, has “twists and turns and cliff-hangers abound” (Booklist) and will keep you guessing until the very last page.

Editorial Reviews

DECEMBER 2015 - AudioFile

George Newbern narrates the sixth Robert Hunter crime novel. Carter's dialogue tags are vital in this production as Newbern makes little distinction between characters. However, there are still spots where listeners will likely lose track of the speaker and find themselves confused. While Newbern’s calm, even delivery works well to highlight the emotional control of the psychotic serial killer, the production has additional problems. Hunter works with a female FBI agent in this series installment. Disappointingly, the author characterizes her as an emotional bumbling idiot who is regularly shown up by L.A. police detective Hunter. Newbern exaggerates this trait in her especially frenzied reactions to the antagonist. Fans of mysteries involving serial killers may enjoy this, but most crime fiction listeners can take a pass. J.F. © AudioFile 2015, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

10/05/2015
In this slick serial-killer thriller from bestselling author Carter (The Death Sculptor), a gruesome discovery in a Wyoming diner parking lot leads to a series of interviews at the FBI’s Quantico Academy between Det. Robert Hunter, of the LAPD, and Lucien Folter, Hunter’s former Stanford roommate and a fellow criminal psychologist, who’s the prime suspect in some 30 cannibalistic murders. Bent on discovering the remains of all the skinned and mutilated victims, Hunter and FBI special agent Courtney Taylor, supervised by Adrian Kennedy, director of the National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crime, embark on a lurid game with Folter that culminates in a beyond-belief chase through New England and a predictable climactic bloodbath. Shallow characterizations and barely digested gobbets of textbook behavioral psychology make this lurid exercise not so much a dizzying descent into a sociopathic mind as a sensationalistic carnival ride through shaky chipped-paint scenery. Agent: Darley Anderson, Darley Anderson Literary Agency. (Dec.)

Fresh Fiction

AN EVIL MIND by Chris Carter is one of the most chilling psychological thrillers.

Booklist

Twists and turns and cliff-hangers abound in this swiftly paced tale.

Susan Crawford—Author of The Pocket Wife

"A chilling, dark thriller, An Evil Mind will have readers running to lock their doors, book in hand. Carter’s knowledge of the intricate details of the criminal mind and his portrayal of a sadistic, psychotic serial killer had me sleeping with the light on and the soothing sounds of HGTV humming in the background. For thriller readers who think they can’t be shocked, try this one!"

Susan Crawford--Author of The Pocket Wife

"A chilling, dark thriller, An Evil Mind will have readers running to lock their doors, book in hand. Carter’s knowledge of the intricate details of the criminal mind and his portrayal of a sadistic, psychotic serial killer had me sleeping with the light on and the soothing sounds of HGTV humming in the background. For thriller readers who think they can’t be shocked, try this one!"

Kirkus Reviews

2015-09-23
An especially sadistic serial killer taunts the feds in this grim thriller. When police investigate a car accident in Wyoming, they find a pair of severed heads in the trunk. The FBI steps in and quickly collars a suspect, Liam Shaw, who says "I will only speak to Robert Hunter." By that, Shaw means Los Angeles detective and criminal profiler Robert Hunter. The FBI borrows him from the LAPD, and they quickly learn that the suspect's real name is Lucien Folter, a former good friend and classmate of Hunter's at Stanford. It turns out that Folter has worked hard to live up to his last name, which means "torture" in German. He never denies any of his murders but delights in stringing Hunter and associates along. As long as he withholds information about the fates and whereabouts of missing people, he can make federal agents dance like puppets. "I can guarantee you this—you have never encountered anyone quite like me," Folter tells Hunter. Folter is a meticulous planner who shows "a very high level of sadism, arrogance, and pride together with a tremendous sense of achievement and pleasure in what he's done." Maybe he even thinks he's killing for "a noble cause." Readers will need strong stomachs to put up with some of the gruesome details of his accomplishments, but the story is well-plotted and -executed—pun intended—and the author creates a level of tension that will compel readers to turn the pages. The initial personal connection between hunter and torturer is a stretch, but it sets up one hell of a contest, with the outcome anything but assured. A true battle of good versus evil. Readers averse to violence and gore may want to avoid this one, but for others, it's a compelling read.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940170456024
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Publication date: 12/01/2015
Series: Robert Hunter , #6
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

An Evil Mind


  • Morning, Sheriff. Morning, Bobby,” the plump, brunette waitress with a small heart tattoo on her left wrist called from behind the counter. She didn’t have to check the clock hanging on the wall to her right. She knew it would be just past 6:00 a.m.

    Every Wednesday, without fail, Sheriff Walton and his deputy Bobby Dale came into the unassuming truck stop, just outside Wheatland in southeastern Wyoming, to get their pie fix. Rumor had it that Nora’s Diner baked the best pies in the state, a different original recipe for every day of the week. Wednesday was apple and cinnamon, Sheriff Walton’s favorite. He was well aware that the first batch always came out of the oven at 6:00 sharp, and you just couldn’t beat the taste of a freshly baked slice.

    “Morning, Beth,” Bobby replied, brushing rainwater off his coat and trousers. “I’ll tell you, the floodgates of hell have opened out there,” he added.

    Summer downpours in southeastern Wyoming were common occurrences, but this morning’s storm was the heaviest they’d seen all season.

    “Morning, Beth,” Sheriff Walton followed, taking off his hat, drying his face and forehead with a handkerchief, and quickly looking around the diner. At that time in the morning, and with such torrential rain outside, the place was a lot less busy than usual. Only three out of its fifteen tables were taken.

    It was easy to match each table’s occupants to their vehicles parked outside. The couple in their midtwenties having a pancake breakfast probably drove the beat-up silver VW Golf; the obese, shaved-headed man and the tall, gray-haired guy by the window pensively toying with his cigarettes would’ve driven in the eighteen-wheelers, while the dark-blue Taurus to the diner’s side had to belong to the stylish, well-groomed forty-something flipping through the morning’s newspaper.

    “Just in time,” Beth said, winking at the sheriff. “They are just out of the oven. As if you didn’t know.”

    The sweet smell of freshly baked apple pie had already engulfed the place.

    Sheriff Walton smiled. “We’ll have our usual, Beth,” he said, taking a seat at the counter.

    “Coming right up,” Beth replied before disappearing into the kitchen. Seconds later she returned with two steaming, extra-large slices of pie, drizzled with honey cream. They looked like perfection on a plate.

    “Umm . . .” the well-dressed man sitting at the far end of the counter said, tentatively raising a finger like a kid asking his teacher’s permission to speak. “Is there any more of that left?”

    “There sure is,” Beth replied, smiling back at him.

    “In that case, can I also have a slice, please?”

    “Yeah, me too,” the large truck driver called out from his table, lifting his hand. He was already licking his lips.

    “And me,” the horseshoe mustache man said, returning the cigarette pack to his jacket pocket. “That pie smells darn good.”

    “Tastes good too,” Beth added.

    “Good doesn’t even come close,” Sheriff Walton said, turning to face the tables. “Y’all are just about to be taken to pie heaven.” Suddenly his eyes widened in surprise. “Holy shit,” he breathed, jumping out of his seat.

    Bobby Dale swung his body around fast to track the sheriff’s stare. The large window just behind where the young couple was sitting framed the headlights of a pickup truck coming straight at them—and fast. The car seemed completely out of control.

    “What the hell?” Bobby rose to his feet as everyone in the diner turned to face the window. The shocked look on their faces was uniform. The truck was headed toward them like a guided missile, and it was showing no signs of diverting or slowing down. They had two, maybe three seconds before impact.

    “EVERYBODY TAKE COVER!” Sheriff Walton yelled. At that speed, that pickup truck would crash through the front of Nora’s diner and not stop until it reached the kitchen at the back, destroying everything in its path.

    Desperate screams and scrambling took over the restaurant floor. They all knew they didn’t have enough time to get out of the way.

    CRUUUUNCH-BOOM.

    The deafening noise sounded like an explosion, making the ground shake under everyone’s feet.

    Sheriff Walton was the first to look up. It took him a few seconds to realize that somehow the car hadn’t crashed through the building at all.

    Confusion replaced the frown on his face.

    “Is everyone all right?” the sheriff called out, frantically looking around.

    “Yeah” was returned from all corners of the room.

    The sheriff and his deputy rushed outside, checking their weapons as they ran. Everyone else followed just a heartbeat later. The rain had definitely gotten heavier in the past few minutes, now pouring in thick sheets that severely reduced visibility.

    Out of sheer luck, the pickup truck had hit a deep pothole on the ground just a few yards from the front of the diner and had drastically veered left, missing the restaurant by just a couple of feet. As it detoured, it clipped the back of the dark-blue Ford Taurus before smashing headfirst into a side building that housed two bathrooms and a storage room, completely destroying it. Thankfully, there had been no one inside, as Walton gathered from Beth’s relieved exclamations.

    “Holy shit!” Sheriff Walton coughed the words out, feeling his heart race inside his chest. The collision had turned the pickup truck into a mangled wreck, and the outside building into a demolition site.

    Skipping over the debris, the sheriff was the first to get to the truck. The driver was its only occupant—a gray-haired man who looked to be somewhere in his late fifties, but it was hard to be sure. Sheriff Walton didn’t recognize him, and he was certain he’d never seen that pickup truck around Wheatland before. It was an old and rusty early 1990s Chevy 1500, and though the driver had been wearing his seat belt, the impact had been way too violent for a truck like this with no air bags. The front of the truck, together with its engine, had caved backward and into the driver’s cabin. The dashboard and steering wheel had crushed the driver’s chest against his seat. His face was covered in blood, torn apart by shards of glass from the windshield. One had sliced through the man’s throat.

    “Goddammit!” Sheriff Walton said through clenched teeth, standing by the driver’s door. He didn’t have to feel for a pulse to know that the man hadn’t survived.

    “Oh my God!” he heard Beth say in a trembling voice from just a few feet behind him. He immediately turned to face her, lifting his hands in a stop motion.

    “Beth, do not come over here,” he commanded her. “Go back inside and stay there.” His stare moved to the rest of the diner patrons, who were coming toward the truck fast. “All of you, go back into the diner. That’s an order. This whole area is now out-of-bounds, y’all hear?”

    Everybody stopped, but no one turned back.

    The sheriff’s eyes searched for his deputy, and found Bobby standing behind the small crowd, back in the parking lot. The look on his face was a mixture of shock and fear.

    “Bobby,” Sheriff Walton called. “Call for an ambulance and the fire department NOW.”

    Bobby didn’t move.

    “Bobby, snap out of it, goddammit. Did you hear what I said? I need you to get the radio and call for an ambulance and the fire department right now.”

    Bobby stood still. He looked like he was about to be sick. Only then did the sheriff realize that Bobby wasn’t even looking at him or at the mangled pickup truck. His eyes were locked on the Taurus. Before crashing into the bathroom building, the truck had clipped the left side of the Taurus’s rear end hard enough to release its trunk door.

    All of a sudden, Bobby broke out of his trance and reached for his gun.

    “No one move,” he yelled out. His shaky aim jumped from person to person. “Sheriff,” he called in an unsteady voice. “You better come have a look at this.”

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