Eyes – Joseph Glass

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When the body of Celeste Cawley was found propped against a fountain in Lincoln Park, the eyes gouged out, the real significance of the suicide of Kyle Stewart came through to the city. And the media, sensing the newsworthiness of this revela- tion, set out to make hay from it. One of the local reporters, famous for his highly placed sources within the police department, had found out how crucial Susan\ second sight had been in the arrest of Kyle Stewart for the crimes.

His feature article on the case was 10,000 words long, spread over eight newspaper pages. It was Dr. Shader who suggested to homicide detectives that the perpetrator was a university employee whose job put him in a position to watch the female athletes as they practiced. 15° / showered, and changed clothes. This tip, based on Shader’s second sight, led to the arrest of Kyle Stewart, whose mainte- nance office was located adjacent to the athletes’ locker room.

A collection of pornography, combined with photographs of some of the coeds, was found in Stewards room. This seemed to confirm the psychic’s intuition, and Stewart was ar- rested for multiple murder. There was no apparent connection between Stewart and the fourth victim, Mrs. Dorothy Kuehn of Oak Lawn. Despite this crucial gap in the chain of evidence, the police placed Stewart, a mild-mannered Marine Corps veteran, in a holding cell at the City fail. It was there that Stewart, despondent over the damage to his reputation caused by the arrest, took his own life.

The murder of Celeste Cawley, carried out with the same MO as the four previous slayings, might have seemed to a ca- sual eye the result of a copycat with a perverse sense of tim- ing, since Cawley was killed only sixteen hours after Stewart’s suicide. However, this reporter has learned that the method of strangulation in the Cawley murder was identical to that em- ployed in the other killings.

.s a ten-year-old girl, tragically orphaned, Susan Shader discovered she was psychic. Touch- ing a photograph of John Lennon one afternoon, she saw him shot to death, years later, in New York City. The assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., the Tate-La Bianca killings, the murderous ram- page of Richard Speck—all revealed themselves to an unwilling, confused, and frightened girl. Now grown up, Dr. Susan Shader is a renowned psychiatrist and criminal profiler whose uncanny gift has made her a celebrity among law enforce- ment professionals.

She is called upon to help the Chicago police capture the Coed Killer—a savage serial murderer of female college athletes who “signs” his work by viciously mutilating his victims. With Susan’s assistance, an arrest is made, the case is closed, and a terrified city breathes a sigh of relief. Until the next murder. Her clairvoyance ridiculed, her reputation destroyed, Susan must act and act fast. She alone can enter the mind of an elusive murderer in time to save the life of his next victim—the most unex- pected one of all.

But her desperate pursuit of the killer will force her into a painful reexamination of her own shrouded past. In Eyes, Joseph Glass unleashes a homicidal mastermind as fiendish as Hannibal Lecter, and introduces Susan Shader, a compelling new 7 literary heroine whose strengths derive from the hidden wellsprings of her character. Combining haunting depth with sheer terror, and reaching emotion rarely touched in a mystery no> a must-read, proceed-at-your-own-risk e: pon W Willie 3 1833 03165 0648 Fiction Glass, Joseph.

Eyes r j ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY FORT WAYNE, INDIANA 46802 You may return this book to any location of the Allen County Public Library. EYES EYES A SUSAN SHADER NOVEL Joseph (jlass $r Viiiard 7\ t w Yo r k K.Pub\\cU*ra« PoV^O 6601.2270 This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely concidental.

Copyright © 1997 by JSL Productions, Inc. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions.

This is a short excerpt from the opening of “” by Unknown, quoted for review and introduction purposes. All rights belong to the copyright holders.

Book Information

  • Unique ID: 07e4abf0de76c636
  • File Extension: .pdf
  • File Size: 24,715,144 bytes (23.57 MB)
  • Title:
  • Author: Unknown
  • ISBN: 0375500162
  • Pages: 377
  • Language: English (en)

Reading & Word Statistics

  • Estimated Reading Time: 549.51 minutes
  • Total Words: 109,902
  • Total Characters: 604,464
  • Average Words per Page: 291.52
  • Average Characters per Page: 1603.35

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