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The Chameleon's Shadow
Minette Walters

Knopf, 2008 - 384 pages

average customer review:based on 12 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended





The Undisputed Queen of Psychological Mystery

This is yet another great novel from the best author of psychological mystery there is. Walters does here what she does best, builds superior character studies of deeply flawed and ambiguous protagoinsts while giving tidbit after tidbit of information about the actual mystery and then resolving that mystery in an entirely believable, yet satisyingly complex way. She also leaves both the protagonist, and the reader, with a satisfying conclusion where total despair is replaced with at least a modicum of hope. This is a must read for anyone who wants a stunning, albeit dark, psychological thriller.


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Intriguing but not too exciting

As the story begins you have the British officer Charles Aceland who endures a tragic accident while on duty. The significance of his injury is played up throughout the book but yet doesn't quite make the reader very suspicious of him. There are murders that are trying to be solved and you never really know who is telling the truth, you have a feeling that you really don't know who the hell was responsible but like any normal mystery it is usually the person that you hear talked about the least.

As I was reading the book there never really was a point where I felt compelled to not stop reading. The book was suspenseful but yet when each character gave their spill about what they think had happenend you were almost bored by their anwsers since you were mostly in la la land the entire time and had not even the slightest clue as to who was the killer or responsible for anything. Usually you have a gut feeling that tells you who the killer might be which keeps you hopeful but this book did no such thing. And some of you may say well thats what makes it a great mystery, and yes that would make it a great mystery, but the events leading up to the discovery of each part of the mystery wasn't riveting enough for my tastes.

I also felt as if their was really no climax or at least a climax where I am just on the edge of my seat and then shocked. The book was an ok read but not near as much of a thriller and excitment as other readers have commented.


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Walters rocks.

Through the first few chapters of this new novel from Minette Walters, the main character, Charles Ackland, irritates everyone--his nurses, his family, the reader. He's been horribly injured in Iraq and will never be "normal" again, a fact that his psychologist tries to prepare him for. But when he becomes a suspect in a series of murders in London, nothing is clear, and guilt seems to darken every corner. Walters maneuvers through a tricky plot with fascinating characters who are so unlikely as to be totally believable, and comes down to a smart and unexpected ending. Great stuff.


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Back on Track

Having been disappointed in her previous book The Devil's Feather, in which I found her personal political views too intrusive, the Chameleon's Shadow was much more enjoyable. Walters stuck more to what she is good at- namely keeping us in suspense until the last minute, but giving us plenty of subliminal information to figure out the culprit for ourselves.


A damaged vet suspected of murder

British Lieutenant Charles Acland, facially disfigured by a roadside bomb in Iraq, the two other men in his command killed, finds himself subject to uncontrollable rages as he slowly regains his memory and begins to heal. Impulsive attacks on his mother and ex-fiancée, as well as noticeable hostility towards women in general have earned him the close attention of psychiatrist Robert Willis.

Despite Acland's terse replies and willful resistance, Willis persists, introducing him to a female colleague in London (whose chatter drives Acland nuts). Living ascetically and eating little, Acland keeps to himself in a rented room until he's arrested for an assault on an elderly man.

Though the old man escaped death, the assault is clearly related to three earlier murders of men who were gay or bisexual and ex-military. A little delving and the police find Acland a perfect fit for the crimes. Luckily for Acland they don't have any evidence and he does have a few friends, among them a smart, no-nonsense, butch-lesbian weight lifter doctor, Jackson, who takes him in and puts up with a lot. In less capable hands Jackson would be one of those gruff, heart-of-gold clichés that form the bedrock of lazy, feel-good movies, but Walters can handle her and even make us believe.

Acland, too, grows as the novel develops, exposing vulnerabilities and a strong ethic along with a truly sinister side that makes him just a bit scary and unpredictable. Not Walters' best, but an absorbing read from one of Britain's top crime writers.


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reviews: page 1, 2, 3



When British lieutenant Charles Acland returns home from Iraq, his serious head injuries are the outward manifestation of a profound inner change: he may be suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, or it may be, as his psychiatrist suggests, ?the prolonged destruction of a personality.?

Though previously well adjusted and known as an extrovert, Acland now withdraws into himself. As he begins his recovery in a dismal provincial hospital, crippled by migraines and suspicious of his doctors, he grows uncharacteristically aggressive?particularly against women, and most particularly against his ex-fiancée. Finally, rejecting medical advice to undergo cosmetic surgery?opting, instead, to accept his disfigurement?and cutting all ties to his former life, he moves to London. There, alone and unmonitored, he sinks into a quagmire of guilt and paranoia?until an outburst of irrational, vicious anger brings him to the attention of the local police: they are investigating three recent murders, all of them apparently motivated by the kind of extreme rage that Acland has exhibited.

Now under suspicion, Acland is forced to confront the issues behind his desperate existence before it?s too late: Has he always been the duplicitous chameleon that his ex-fiancée accuses him of being? Can he control this newly apparent sinister side of his personality? And why, if he truly hates women, does he in the end seek help from a woman?someone as straightforward and self-disciplined as he is unsure and seemingly out of control?to repair the damage to his mind?

In its timeliness, its psychological complexity, and its unstoppable suspense, The Chameleon?s Shadow is a thriller of the first order.




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