Publisher's Weekly Review
Yet another serial killer stalks the Internet, this one courtesy of the talented Iles (Black Cross; Spandau Phoenix). When futures trader Harper Cole, who moonlights as the systems operator of an erotic online services called EROS, contacts the New Orleans police with information about the murder of celebrated author-and EROS subscriber-Karin Wheat, he immediately becomes the prime suspect in six other murders of EROS subscribers across the country. Also on the FBI's short list is Cole's eccentric friend and EROS colleague Miles Turner, who has dubbed the killer "Brahma." When Cole learns that the man he thought was Brahma was killed a year ago and that his online identity was stolen, a tense cat-and-mouse game commences. Professional hunters, like FBI psychiatric profiler Arthur Lenz, have the online tables turned on them time and again by an insanely brilliant murderer, and it's up to Cole to render justice. His digging leads to an exciting payoff when he goes online and poses as a potential victim, using as bait a secret that endangers the mother of his child, as well as his wife. While Cole's obsession over this guilty secret makes him less than likable at times, a nailbiting climax erases any doubts about his character-and any lingering questioning about the storytelling abilities of Iles, who here uses rich first-person narration and clever plotting to tell a sizzler of a thriller. Literary Guild and Doubleday Book Club selection; simultaneous Penguin Audio Book. (Feb.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Kirkus Review
An exuberant if somewhat hokey computer age serial-killer- thriller combines voyeuristic sex, Internet technobabble, tedious brain research, and southern-fried soap opera with a high degree of stay-up-all-night suspense. Can you hate a novel that hacks off Anne Rice's head in the first chapter? Shaken by the news of the gory murder of New Orleans gothic horror novelist ``Karin Wheat,'' Harper Cole, a self-made commodities trader and secret systems operator of EROS, an upscale Internet sex-chat service, knows that when Wheat wasn't pounding out bestselling terror tales, she was sharing her deepest erotic fantasies with other pseudonymous EROS members, six of whom have been mysteriously murdered within the last year. Fearing that the killer has gained access to EROS's secret files, Cole, who labors in obscurity from a home office hidden among Mississippi cotton fields, calls the New Orleans police and thus brings calamity on himself, his hardworking ob/gyn wife, his sexpot sister-in-law Erin, fatherly FBI forensic psychiatrist Arthur Lenz, and Cole's best friend, eccentric computer genius Miles Turner, creator of the EROS network. To lure the serial killer into revealing himself, Cole goes online pretending to be Erin, a tactic whose gender- switching eroticism is never realized as Iles (Black Cross, 1995, etc.) dumps a fishmonger's cart of red herrings in Cole's path. The villain is a typically brilliant homicidal übermensch who confounds the best efforts of the FBI but is so obsessed with computers, neurology, and obscure Hindu mythology that he can't help but talk online about how brilliant he is, ad infinitum, ad nauseam. Iles counters this tedium with expertly detailed violence, computer lore, and predictable plotting that eventually brings the killer to Cole's doorstep, where he attempts to make Cole's wife his ultimate mate. An overlong but relentlessly readable, by-the-numbers thriller whose up-to-the-minute technology will delight net surfers and Anne Rice fans. (Literary Guild selection)
Booklist Review
Iles displays a flair for pushing topical hot buttons in his third thriller. The story kicks off with the gruesome murder of New Orleans horror novelist Karin Wheat. From there, we move into a plot involving telecommuting, hackers, cybersex, and the supposed regenerative properties of melatonin. Sensitive guy Harper Cole lives with his physician wife Drewe in his ancestral farmhouse in Mississippi, but he makes his living trading options on the Chicago exchanges and working as a sysop for a New York^-based online service called EROS (for Erotic Realtime Online Stimulation). When female EROS clients--including Karin Wheat--start disappearing from their online haunts, Harper suspects foul play and phones in a tip to the New Orleans police. His suspicions are confirmed when the bodies of the missing women start turning up around the country, but as the only known link between them, he's the prime suspect in the murders. In order to prove his innocence, he must smoke out the killer by creating an irresistible female online persona, putting himself and his family squarely in the line of fire. As in the author's first two novels, Spandau Phoenix (1993) and Black Cross (1994), there's a master-race theme at work here--the killer is a Nietzsche-quoting scientist looking for the secret of eternal youth (and a nice Aryan girl) in all the wrong places. This is a bit light for serious techno-thriller buffs, but it should be popular among the AOL chat-room crowd. --June Vigor
Library Journal Review
After the murders of six virtual vixens, the operator of an exclusive online sex service risks his own neck to catch the killer. Iles's first two thrillers (e.g., Black Cross, LJ 11/15/94) were best sellers. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.