Posts Tagged ‘Vincent Zandri’


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The Remains by Vincent Zandri

December 10, 2010 by Elizabeth A. White  •
The Remains by Vincent ZandriFor a quick moment I thought about looking into the rear view. But I resisted the urge. Better not to see what was behind me; what might have been stalking me. – Rebecca Underhill

Painter and art instructor Rebecca Underhill is not sure who or what is stalking her, but for six months she’s been receiving odd and disconcerting text messages. Initially they simply said her name, but most recently have consisted of a single word: Remember.

She may have been able to dismiss the messages as just a prank, except that she has been remembering. She’s been having nightmares about a horrific event she and her twin sister, Molly, experienced thirty years prior.

The two sisters were abducted for a harrowing afternoon by a man who lived in a remote cabin in the woods surrounding their family’s farm. The girls escaped and, having been playing somewhere they weren’t supposed to be, made a pact not to tell their parents about what had happened.

Any doubt they had about their decision was removed when the man was arrested for another crime shortly after their ordeal and sentenced to thirty years in prison. Thirty years seemed like an eternity to the young girls; surely the monster would die in prison and they’d be safe. And they were, for awhile. But ten years ago Molly passed away from cancer and the girls’ parents died not too long after. Now Rebecca is alone with her nightmares. Or is she?

As with his previous release, the wonderful Moonlight Falls, author Vincent Zandri demonstrates that he’s most comfortable blazing his own trail and writing in areas that aren’t easily categorized. One would be hard pressed exactly how to describe The Remains. It’s part mystery, part thriller, part suspense, and even has a little touch of the supernatural. What there’s no mistake that it is, however, is gripping.

The cast of characters is tight, with Rebecca and one of her fellow artists, autistic savant and childhood friend Franny, taking center stage. Zandri skillfully interweaves the events currently vexing Rebecca with the events from the past that are haunting her, slowly building tension and revealing the depths of her nightmares and torment bit by tantalizing bit as the book unfolds.

Moonlight Falls was the first Zandri book I read, and I enjoyed it immensely. I went into the The Remains hoping for another experience that would be just as engaging, and Zandri did not disappoint. The Remains is an intense page turner that will keep you reading late into the night.

Vincent Zandri is an award-winning, bestselling novelist, essayist and freelance photojournalist. He holds an M.F.A. in Writing from Vermont College and is a 2010 International Thriller Writer’s Awards panel judge. Zandri currently divides his time between New York and Europe. He is the drummer for the Albany-based punk band to Blisterz. To learn more about Vincent Zandri, visit his website.

- The Remains by Vincent Zandri -


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Moonlight Falls by Vincent Zandri

March 12, 2010 by Elizabeth A. White  •

Moonlight Falls by Vincent ZandriIt takes serious balls to begin a book with your protagonist deliberately putting a bullet into his own head, but that’s exactly how Vincent Zandri kicks off his high-octane new thriller Moonlight Falls. Richard “Dick” Moonlight, you see, is not your typical protagonist. In fact, he’s seriously screwed up. As one character tells him, “You fell off the tree of fucked-up-weird and slammed every branch on the way down.” Fucked-up-weird notwithstanding, it’s the fragment of .22 bullet left in his brain following his book opening suicide attempt that forces Moonlight’s retirement from the Albany police department.

Unable to commit to a new job because the placement of the bullet fragment leaves him prone to untimely blackouts and seizures, not to mention serious lapses in judgment, Moonlight finds himself being called upon by his former partner to serve as an outside investigator on cases that need a discrete, but ‘official’, rubber stamping in order to close them… for a fee, of course.

This arrangement becomes a problem when he’s called to the scene of the apparent suicide of Scarlet Montana, wife of his ex-boss Chief of Detectives Jake Montana. Unlike previous callouts, Moonlight can’t bring himself to rubber stamp suicide as the cause of death, collect his under the table fee and be done with it. The sticking point? Not only was Moonlight having an affair with her, but he had been with her only hours before her death. What’s more, given his spotty memory – not to mention the bloody, scratched up hands he doesn’t remember acquiring – he honestly doesn’t know if he could be responsible for her death. But he’s determined to find out what really happened to Scarlet, no matter what the consequences to himself may be.

What unfolds over the course of his investigation provides a non-stop, tension filled ride for the reader; one that includes a mysterious albino, Fugitive-esque pursuit by authorities, grave robbing, a police conspiracy, and a black market organ harvesting ring. There is so much going on that even the most accomplished reader of mysteries and thrillers will be hard pressed to figure out in advance what really happened, as Moonlight Falls delivers twists and swerves right up until the final chapter, even after having seemingly revealed the answer to the mystery.

To learn more about Vincent Zandri, visit his website.

-Moonlight Falls: Book Trailer -