“Cross” is
the 12th book in the Alex Cross series, a series I’ve been reading
on and off for years. You don’t have to read them in order, but you must know a
bit about Alex Cross’s history. Alex Cross is a widower and it’s important to
his character, and he’s a committed family man. Sometimes Cross comes off like
such a saint, a bit too wholesome for a detective. In this novel, Alex Cross is after the man he
thinks might have killed his wife, a serial killer and rapist simply known as
the Butcher by local police enforcement. The man is named Michael Sullivan, and
is by the look of it from outsiders, a family man.
This isn’t
a bad set up, and in the first half of the novel, you get an extended prologue
recounting Cross’s life with his wife and her eventual murder. This isn’t poorly
done. The book gets a little ridiculous when the killer/rapist goes to other
parts of the world to carry out hired killings. It seems a bit over the top. He
even takes photographs of his rape victims after he is done with them. One of
the things Patterson tends to do is make his villains a so over the top, that
it leads to you to question how this person can even be real. However, he also
gives some reasoning in this novel to why Michael Sullivan is so evil, flashing
back to his abusive father.
Alex Cross
tends to have his usual drama, with his grandmother, Mama Nana, telling Cross
he needs to quite the force to better look after his children. The book has its
usual narration style, going back and forth from the third person point of view
following the villain around, and Cross’s narration of things going on in his
life. Cross quits the force for a while and starts to be a private practice
therapist. Though, Cross being Cross, he does bend some ethical boundaries to
help his patients.
One of the
problems I did have with this book is for a book titled Cross, we do spend a
lot more time following around the killer. It’s like Patterson isn’t sure Alex
Cross is an interesting enough character to follow for the whole book. I
eventually wanted to get back to Alex Cross and his search for his wife’s
killer, with his partner, Sampson. All in all, not a bad page turner. It’s your
typical Patterson novel with the short chapters and action-packed scenes. As
with all Patterson’s, you’ll read it, enjoy it and forget it when you turn the
last page.

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