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Bad Blood By John Sandford

Bad Blood

A Virgil Flowers Novel

by John Sandford

Mem. Ed. $17.99

Pub. Ed. $27.95

You pay $0.20

Bad Blood

One of those days: late fall, bare black tree branches scratching at a churning gray sky, days cold, nights colder. The harvest was very late—record late—and moving fast. The soybean crop had been delayed because of a cold summer, and then in the middle of October, with half the crop in, rain began to fall, a couple of inches a week, and didn’t quit for a month. Now it was dry again, but a landslide of bad weather hovered over the western horizon, and the combines were working twenty hours a day, bringing in the last of the beans and corn.

Bob Tripp leaned against the highway-side wall at the Battenberg Farmer’s Co-op grain elevator, knowing that Jacob Flood was on his way.

You could not only see the harvest—the working lights in the fields at night, the tractors and wagons on the roads—but you could hear it, and smell it, and even taste it in the air. Tasted like grain, and a little like dust, Tripp thought. His favorite time of year for the outdoors: regular deer season just over, muzzleloader coming up, snowmobiles ready to go.

Flood had called from his field in the early afternoon: “I need to get in and out fast. You open?”

“I got two wagons being weighed right now,” Tripp had said. “John McGuire’s coming in probably twenty minutes, nothing after that. If you can get here in an hour or so, we should be open. People have been calling to check, nobody’s called about coming in after John.”

“Put me down for three,” Flood said. “And goldarnit, I gotta get in and out.”

“Help you the best we can,” Tripp said. Tripp was nineteen, a high school jock who should have been playing freshman football at a state college. An automobile accident in June, which had broken his left leg, had put that off for a year. The leg had mostly healed by September, and he’d taken the temporary clerk’s job at the co-op, where the leg hadn’t been too important. He was getting along well, doing rehab exercises every night. The doc said he’d be as good as ever by spring.

Maybe he would be, he thought. Maybe not.

He looked at his watch. Five minutes to three. Nobody coming in. He walked back to the small elevator office, worked the combination on his locker, and popped it open. He wore coveralls on the job, kept his civilian clothes in the locker. He pushed them aside, took out the aluminum T-ball bat he’d hidden there.

He’d had the bat since he was five years old, even then a budding star. He swung it a few times, getting reacquainted with its weight, and thought about what he was going to do. He might get caught, but he’d do it anyway. He looked at himself the way athletes do, spotted the fear, the trepidation, and the anger, and let them percolate through his muscles, jacking himself up for the battle.

Running late and barely able to keep his eyes open, Jacob Flood leaned on the truck’s horn as he nudged the old Chevy up to the edge of the scales. He’d been working since early Wednesday morning, with four hours of sleep in the middle of it.

Copyright © 2010 by John Sandford

Bad Blood

Bad Blood is good news for John Sandford fans, who begin anticipating the next Virgil Flowers novel the second they put one down. This time, the long-haired law enforcement agent and chick magnet is called in to help a sheriff—who is both attractive and tough—solve a baffling string of murders.

It wasn’t an easy way to die, Sheriff Lee Coakley tells Virgil. According to the kid who called in the alleged accident, local sports star Bobby Tripp, the victim fell into the grain bin. But when evidence revealed the dead farmer had been struck first, Bobby was arrested…and found hanging in his cell the next morning. Coakley’s dilemma is this: Bobby, it appears, was murdered, too. And she’s pretty sure it was by her deputy in charge....

Virgil’s not sure how it all fits together yet, especially when he sets out to question the deputy and finds the guy sprawled on his couch, felled by a gunshot that, upon first inspection, seems like a suicide. But it isn’t. What it is, Virgil soon learns, is a multi-generation, multi-family conspiracy involved in crimes so monstrous even he, who’s seen it all, is stunned. Now all he has to do is figure out how to end the madness without becoming the next victim.

Hardcover Book : 400 pages

Publisher: Putnam Pub Group/Member, Penguin Putnam ( September 21, 2010 )

Item #: 13-162615

ISBN: 9780399156908

Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.25 x 0.9inches

Product Weight: 17.0 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

A Real Winner!
October 19, 2010

I enjoyVirgil even more than Lucas now. Perhaps it's just a fresh character, but I think it's more his personality. This book is outstandingly readable.

Reviewer: suztoy

Must Read
October 18, 2010

This is a very good read, really keeps your interest. The story line is graphic so if you are fragile, better skip this one. It has been fun to watch Flowers "bloom" over the last 4 books into a real, feeling and great person/detective!!! Enjoy!!!!

Reviewer: Dolly

Bad Blood
October 17, 2010

This is Virgil at one of his all time best. A real page turner. Story might be disturbing to some but sadly this happens not just in fiction. Can't waite for more of Virgil and Lucas thrillers!

Reviewer: Pat M

Must read for Sandford fans
October 11, 2010

Like most reviewers, the main theme of this book is disturbing and some people will not be able to handle it. Unfortunately these things probably happen, but again, some parts were hard to read and imagine them for real. On the whole though, the book was wonderful. Good characters. Flowers is the best. I will always read John Sandford. He is up there as one of the best. Enjoy, but if you can't handle these types of situations, best leave this one alone.

Reviewer: Vicky

Gripping story
October 11, 2010

The Virgil Flowers stories keep getting better and better. Love this quixotic hero. Kudos to John Stanford and his excellent writing. I've read several of his "Prey" novels and am glad he is verturing into other territory.

Reviewer: Audrey W

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