Still Life with Crows

Abridged
Author: Douglas Preston , Lincoln Child
Narrator: Rene Auberjonois
Genres: Mystery, Thriller
Publisher: Time Warner Audio Books
Date: July 2003
Length: 6 hours
Ratings:
  • Book Rating: 4/5
Formats:
  • CD

Overview

Medicine Creek, Kansas, has been slowly dying for the last century. A small, quiet place, the primary occupation is still farming, Main Street is a stretch of old and dusty businesses, and the nearest mall is 200 miles away. In a town where nothing changes, the community is terrified after a series of grisly murders takes place. Even more alarming, the bodies are displayed in bizarre tableaus. With the entire town in shock, FBI Agent Pendergast arrives from New Orleans to investigate. From the fields to the local caves, Pendergast discovers the remnants of a Prohibition-era moonshine operation and the truth behind one of the town's greatest mysteries: who was behind the Medicine Creek Massacre of 1865. Now, Pendergast must discover the twisted secret hiding within a four-generation Kansas family—before someone else is murdered.

Reviews (18)

Still Life With Crows

Written by Mimi in Atlanta from Newnan, GA on July 30th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 4/5

I was beginning to tire of Agent Pendergast, but this book revived my interest in this character. Liked the story and the characters. Glad I gave him another chance!

Still Life with Crows

Written by Anonymous on June 3rd, 2008

  • Book Rating: 4/5

Normally I try to avoid abridged books. This one was very entertaining, though. The Pendergast character is good and the narrator was excellent.

Excellent

Written by Susan Tortorici on February 4th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 5/5

Agent Pendergast at his best! What a wonderful & believable character! Preston & Child are phenominal together. More, more, more...!!

Still Life with Crows

Written by Anonymous from Irvine, CA on February 3rd, 2008

  • Book Rating: 5/5

The best part about this book was the reader. I loved, loved how he changed voices and accents based on different characters. His portrayal of Agent Pendergast was, I thought, right on. This is not the type of book to listen to if you have short commutes for you will be completely glued to they story. I honestly got spooked several times driving at night while listening to this book.

Still Life with Crows

Written by Mariesa Crow on July 2nd, 2007

  • Book Rating: 5/5

I've always been an Agent Pendergast fan and this book certainly delivers. Just enough gore and suspense to keep me on the edge of my seat and coming back for more. The plot was a bit predictable, but still a good all round story and engaging writing.

Still Life with Crows

Written by Anonymous on March 30th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 4/5

I found this to be a very good read. I had not previously read these authors and a friend suggested the book as I love a good mystery. I was not disappointed!

Still Life with Crows

Written by Sharon Deaves on February 5th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 5/5

This book is worth your time! Not only is the story good and keeps you in the edge of your seat, but the two main people in the story are very interesting and not every day "sortsa'. Don't rent this one if your drive is going to be short, you will be sitting in your car for a while after you get there!

Still ilke with crows

Written by Beth Paquette on November 6th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 4/5

I liked the story plot was weak in areas but it kept me wondering.

Still Life with Crows

Written by Mark Pope on June 14th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 4/5

Nice & scary. Plots a tad weak and predictable but otherwise entertaining.

where's the movie

Written by Anonymous from Norwalk, CT on April 23rd, 2006

  • Book Rating: 5/5

Hollywood missed on this one, someone get them a script! Edge of the seat, interesting characters, location & awsome reader. Everyone has a purpose in life, even those that don't seem to fit. As an FBI agent Prendergast is refreshing as a quiet ,patient and intellegent investigator leaving the macho behind and using his mind in a non condescending manner. Absolutely don't miss this one!

Author Details

Author Details

Preston, Douglas

Douglas Preston was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1956. He attended Pomona College in Claremont, California, and graduated cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa, in 1978, with a degree in English literature.

From 1978 to 1985, Preston worked for the American Museum of Natural History in New York City as a writer, editor, and manager of publications. He served as Managing Editor for the journal Curator and was a columnist for Natural History magazine. In 1985 he published a history of the museum, DINOSAURS IN THE ATTIC, which chronicled the explorers and expeditions of the museum's early days.

In 1986 Preston moved to New Mexico and began to write full-time. Seeking an understanding of the first moment of contact between Europeans and Indians in America, he retraced on horseback Francisco Vasquez de Coronado's violent and unsuccessful search for the legendary Seven Cities of Gold. That thousand mile journey across the American Southwest resulted in the book, CITIES OF GOLD. Since that time Preston has undertaken many long horseback journeys retracing historic or prehistoric trails. He has also participated in expeditions in other parts of the world, including a journey deep into Khmer Rouge-held territory in the Cambodian jungle with a small army of soldiers, to be the first Westerner to visit a lost Angkor temple. He once had the thrill of being the first person in 3,000 years to enter an ancient Egyptian burial chamber in a tomb known as KV5 in the Valley of the Kings.

Preston has published five nonfiction books and thirteen novels, most of which were bestsellers and translated into many languages. With his frequent collaborator, Lincoln Child, he has authored such bestselling thrillers as THE CABINET OF CURIOSITIES, THE ICE LIMIT, THUNDERHEAD, RIPTIDE, BRIMSTONE and RELIC. His most recent novel, DANCE OF DEATH, which came out in June 2005, was on the New York Times bestseller list for six weeks. Preston writes about archaeology for the New Yorker magazine and he has also been published in Smithsonian magazine, Harper's, and National Geographic. He is the recipient of numerous writing awards.

Preston counts in his ancestry the poet Emily Dickinson, the newspaperman Horace Greeley, and the infamous murderer and opium addict Amasa Greenough. He and his wife, Christine, live in Maine with their three children.

Child, Lincoln

Lincoln Child was born in Westport, Connecticut, which he still calls his hometown (despite the fact that he left the place before he reached his first birthday and now only goes back for weekends).

Lincoln seemed to have acquired an interest in writing as early as second grade, when he wrote a short story entitled Bumble the Elephant (now believed by scholars to be lost). Along with two dozen short stories composed during his youth, he wrote a science-fiction novel in tenth grade called Second Son of Daedalus and a shamelessly Tolkeinesque fantasy in twelfth grade titled The Darkness to the North (left unfinished at 400 manuscript pages). Both are exquisitely embarrassing to read today and are kept under lock and key by the author.

After a childhood that is of interest only to himself, Lincoln graduated from Carleton College (huh?) in Northfield, Minnesota, majoring in English. Discovering a fascination for words, and their habit of turning up in so many books, he made his way to New York in the summer of 1979, intent on finding a job in publishing. He was lucky enough to secure a position as editorial assistant at St. Martin's Press.

Over the next several years, he clawed his way up the editorial hierarchy, moving to assistant editor to associate editor before becoming a full editor in 1984. While at St. Martin's, he was associated with the work of many authors, including that of James Herriot and M. M. Kaye. He edited well over a hundred books--with titles as diverse as The Notation of Western Music and Hitler's Rocket Sites--but focused primarily on American and English popular fiction.

While at St. Martin's, Lincoln assembled several collections of ghost and horror stories, beginning with the hardcover collections Dark Company (1984) and Dark Banquet (1985). Later, when he founded the company's mass-market horror division, he edited three more collections of ghost stories, Tales of the Dark 1-3.

In 1987, Lincoln left trade publishing to work at MetLife. In a rather sudden transition, he went from editing manuscripts, speaking at sales conferences, and wining/dining agents to doing highly technical programming and systems analysis. Though the switch might seem bizarre, Lincoln was a propeller-head from a very early age, and his extensive programming experience dates back to high school, when he worked with DEC minis and the now-prehistoric IBM 1620, so antique it actually had an electric typewriter mounted into its front panel. Away from the world of publishing, Lincoln's own nascent interests in writing returned. While at MetLife, Relic was published, and within a few years Lincoln had left the company to write full time. He now lives in New Jersey (under protest--just kidding) with his wife and daughter.

A dilettante by natural inclination, Lincoln's interests include: pre-1950s literature and poetry; post-1950s popular fiction; playing the piano, various MIDI instruments, and the 5-string banjo; English and American history; motorcycles; architecture; classical music, early jazz, blues, and R&B; exotic parrots; esoteric programming languages; mountain hiking; bow ties; Italian suits; fedoras; archaeology; and multiplayer deathmatching.