Shadow Prey (Lucas Davenport, #2)

Shadow Prey (Lucas Davenport, #2)

John Sandford

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The #1 'New York Times' bestselling series. Lucas Davenport goes on a city-to-city search for a bizarre ritualistic killer of a slumlord and a welfare supervisor butchered in Minneapolis . . . a rising political star executed in Manhattan . . . and an influential judge taken in Oklahoma City. All the homicides have the same grisly method — the victim's throat is slashed with an Indian ceremonial knife – and in every case the twisted trail leads back through the Minnesota Native American community to an embodiment of primal evil known as Shadow Love. Once unleashed, Shadow Love's need to kill cannot be checked, even by those who think they control him. Soon he will be stalking Lucas Davenport — and the woman he loves... Never get involved with a cop, that's what Lieutenant Lucas Davenport has been warning women for years, but now he finds himself on dangerous ground with a policewoman named Lily Rothenburg, on assignment from New York to help investigate the murders. Both have other commitments, but neither can stop, and as their affair grows more intense, so too does the mayhem surrounding them, until the combined passion and violence threaten to spin out of control and engulf them both. Together, Lucas and Lily must stalk the drugged-out, desperate world of the city's meanest streets to flush out Shadow Love. Librarian's note: the first five books in the Lucas Davenport series are #1, Rules of Prey, 1989; #2, Shadow Prey, 1990; #3, Eyes of Prey, 1991; #4, Silent Prey, 1992; and #5, Winter Prey, 1993.


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  • wenders
    Jan 07, 2025
    Enjoyment: Quality: Characters: Plot:

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  • Breezie_Reads
    Mar 11, 2025
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    This book was so much better than the first one. Lucas is still a dog and a shit person, but it wasn't as insufferable as it was in Rules of Prey.

    I appreciate how the author wrote Davenport's flashbacks and how Sanford handled that trauma specifically. I don't know if my first reaction would have been to fuck my girlfriend like an animal, but considering how Lucas Davenport's character is written, it checks.

    I will say, once again, that the book obviously did not age well. And we can see that in how the "Indians" are referred to and how they're treated. But in the 90's? I'm sure that was a common thing that happened so I can't be too pressed about it.

    What I can be too pressed about, though, is the gross amount of sex this man has. I don't understand. I really don't. What is the point of having so many unnecessary sex scenes? They add nothing to plot whatsoever. We get it. Davenport is this super-attractive chick magnet (which makes no sense because based off of the description given in the first book, he isn't even attractive) that can bag whoever he wants. And he gets to sleep with whoever he wants, all the time. Lame. And extremely unnecessary to make that a big part of his character.

    My favorite thing about this book, though, was the Crows. Their whole operation they had going on was amazing. And I understand completely. I didn't even view them as the bad guys, which makes them that much better. The second their plan was introduced and the second it was shown that it was a years-long operation that they had been building towards, I loved it.

    This book definitely outdoes the first one and I'm afraid of getting my hopes too high with the rest of the books in the series, but my faith has been restored. It was fast-paced and I enjoyed reading almost every page (and I'm saying "almost every page" because I hated how many times I rolled my eyes at the racist comments against Indigenous tribes and I hated how many times Lucas decided he was going love his girlfriend but cheat on her and not feel guilty about it. BUT ANYWAY.). 

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