Bad Blood (A Virgil Flowers Novel)

by John Sandford

2011

Status

Available

Publication

Berkley Books (2011), 405 pages

Description

When a murder suspect commits suicide after his arrest for killing a soybean farmer, Virgil Flowers uncovers a multi-generation, multi-family conspiracy involving a series of monstrous crimes.

User reviews

LibraryThing member susanamper
The topic is child sex abuse. I am not sure if the reason is prurient or just stupid. I am not reading a non fiction account; I don't want to pick up a work of fiction and read, in specific detail, what happens in the backwoods of Minnesota. Virgil Flowers remains a flat character and the ending
Show More
paragraph borders on repulsiveness.
Show Less
LibraryThing member adpaton
Sandford is a prolific and profoundly readable writer, capable of juggling plots and characters with effortless ease and Bad Blood, the fourth in the Virgil Flowers series but the first I have read, is everything a thriller should aspire to be.
Lee Coakley is the new sheriff in a small Minnesota
Show More
town and when called in for a series of murders she is happy to turn to Flowers, veteran of the Bureau of Criminal Investigation, for help.
Deliciously twisted family secrets, a delightfully perverse religious sect, official corruption, legal shenanigans and, naturally, murders, all add up to a superbly engrossing read.
Show Less
LibraryThing member PatrickJIV
That fck'in Flowers is at it again! I will never tire of reading about this character! Like this guy better than his boss, Lucas Davenport.
LibraryThing member auntmarge64
A new John Sandford suspense novel is always cause for celebration. His Lucas Davenport "Prey" series is one of my favorites, but now that Davenport has settled a bit in life, Virgil Flowers, one of his team, has become the center of a new series. Sandford has his storytelling down pat and it just
Show More
keeps getting better and better. You know you'll always find yourself hyperventilating and not being able to put the book down for the last third of the book.
Show Less
LibraryThing member cenneidigh
I love Vigil and the adventures he gets into. This one deals with a cult and the things they do. It is a sexual crime and so it talks lots about incest and rape. The mystery aspect is good and the characters are fun. This is the 4th in the series and they just get better.
LibraryThing member mikedraper
Virgil Flowers of the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension is called in to a small town in Minnesota where there have been four murders.

Virgil learns that Peter Tripp, an employee at a grain company, killed Jacob Flood, a farmer.
Police arrested Tripp and someone killed him in his cell.
When
Show More
Virgil goes to interview police officer Jim Crocker, he finds Crocker has been murdered.
Then Virgil learns that a young girl, Kelly Baker, was killed a while back. Her body was found in a graveyard and showed signs of extreme sexual activity.

Through the investigation, Virgil learns that Flood, Crocker and Kelly Baker were all members of a church group. He has to break someone from the group into telling him about it. Then he lerns that this group is part of a multigenerational group that has been active in child rape, pedophelia, abuse and other sexual activity.

The novel is well plotted and suspenseful. Virgil is a wise cracking character who is like a bulldog and keeps after the wrong doers unitl they are caught and punished.
Show Less
LibraryThing member shazjhb
Enjoy the main detective so reading the book is easy. Hopefully this is a true work of fiction but maybe not!
LibraryThing member norinrad10
As a huge fan of Sandford's "Prey" books I've been slow to warm to the Virgil Floweres series. The character is fine. Kind of reminds me of Davenport if he was still single. The problem has always been the writing. This series has always suffered from the James Paterson school of get a young writer
Show More
to write the majority of the book then I'll slap my name on it and all my fans buy it. The good news is that this one sounds like Sandford all the way through. The bad news is, its kinda dull. The case involves a sect up in Minnesota that engages in all kinds of sexual shenanigans and it just kind of plods along. Virgil is better developed and keeps it interesting, but hopefully next month's Prey book is a whole lot more interesting.
Show Less
LibraryThing member bookscentlover
Started superb. Pardon the cliche, a fuckin' page turner. Then at the end, lousy writing. What the hell happened?
LibraryThing member manadabomb
Another F*ckin' Flowers book. He might be topping Davenport as my favorite character...might.

Spoilers ahead:

We start this one off with a young adult murdering another adult. It's all very vague, there's no background or particular reason why this young man, Tripp, committed the murder. While Tripp
Show More
is in jail, he is murdered. His death is made to look like a suicide by Crocker, one of the cops in charge of the station that night. Then Crocker is murdered, made to look like a suicide.

This trail of deaths prompts Lee Coakley, the lady sheriff, to bring in Virgil Flowers. The little area that Coakley is in charge of usually has maybe 1 murder every 5 years, so 3 in a week is more than they can handle. Flowers comes in and does his thing that leads him to another murder years earlier.

After a lot of digging, something even more heinous than the murders turn up. A church, called the World of Spirit, has a large congregation among the farmers but rumors of child abuse keep surfacing. Emmett Einstadt is the head of the church and pretty despicable.

It's a long haul to get the church taken down but well worth it. Full of frightening concepts that actually make the murders the tamest part of the book.
Show Less
LibraryThing member ZachMontana
Part of the Vigil Flowers series which I enjoy. He's a cool guy and in this book gets the woman - small town sheriff asking for his help in what turns out to be a big religious cult sex thing.
LibraryThing member dickmanikowski
I never thought I'd find an ongoing crime fiction protagonist more engaging than John Sandford's Lucas Davenport, but Virgil Flowers (often referred to by his colleagues and even casual acquaintances as "that f***ing Flowers" has pushed Lucas off his pedestal.
This novel is typical Flowers fare. The
Show More
lone wolf investigator from the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension is sent to a rural town to investigate what appears to be the jailhouse murder of a suspect by a sheriff's deputy. What he discovers turns out to be a web of evil that may go back for generations.
Highly recommended. Be advised, though, that there's some seriously disturbing stuff in this book
Show Less
LibraryThing member fromkin
I've enjoyed a couple of Sandford's Lucas Davenport novels, and this was my introduction to Virgil Flowers. As a character, he's rather similar to Davenport, a little more country, upstate rather than downstate Minnesota, but just as dedicated and just as willing to engage in an illegal search for
Show More
evidence. But this is a very different, very dark plot. Religion as the last - or first - refuge of scoundrels. Very well paced, Sanford takes the reader through painstaking police procedural to a shattering multi-part climax. There was one surprising editing error, when on consecutive pages Sanford described a female sheriff as having blonde hair, with a touch of gray; and on the next page as having red hair. Otherwise, highly recommended.
Show Less
LibraryThing member bohemiangirl35
The third installment in the Virgil Flowers series takes a different approach than the previous two. You quickly find out who the villains are as Flowers, from the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, assists new Sheriff Lee Coakley in investigating a jailhouse murder staged to look like a
Show More
suicide. Most of the story is about Flowers and Coakley figuring out who to trust as they investigate a suspected underlying crime (which is very disturbing).

The book is a little like having a country Jack Reacher in a Karin Slaughter novel. Flowers turns on the charm as he asks the town for help in finding leads and seduces the sheriff starting with his "third most innocent cowboy smile." Flowers is funny and keeps the story light-hearted.

Eric Conger does a great job with narration.
Show Less
LibraryThing member SonicQuack
Virgil Flowers as a character goes from strength to strength and his fourth outing is one of Sandford's hardest hitting and thrilling novels yet. There is no requirement to have read any previous Flowers books, although cameos and from previous books and the Davenport series are almost obligatory.
Show More
Sandford's plots have become darker recently (even though they did start with serial killers) and Bad Blood is insidious, tapping in to the horrors within a closed community. In Bad Blood the lead from an odd murder unravels something larger, with excellent character development between Flowers and Sheriff Lee Coakley, supported by Sandford's smart narrative and humourous dialogue. It's a brave break from the norm, absolutely suited to the Flowers arc and delivers shocks and entertainment in equal measure. It's a triumph from the start, adding tension throughout until the grand finale. Utterly absorbing, this dark crime thriller is Sandford on top form - and he was already one of the best.
Show Less
LibraryThing member judithrs
Bad Blood. John Sandford. 2011. Sandford’s novels are suspenseful and exciting and his characters are very human. Virgil Flowers is becoming one of my favorite characters-he is flawed but moral and likable. He works for the state crime agency that is run by Lucas Davenport who is the main
Show More
character in Sandford’s “Prey” books. He is called by a newly elected female sheriff of small Minnesota town to investigate an accident that is a murder and a suicide that is a murder. Together they uncover a vile religious cult that sanctions child sexual abuse
Show Less
LibraryThing member repb
I was surprised at the distasteful subject of this Sanford series with Flowers, normally one of my favorite characters. I found it very disturbing, overly disgusting and violent, totally unbelievable and rife with obscenities. Other than that ...
LibraryThing member KarenEHall
Somebody recently asked, “If you could have dinner with any character from fiction, who would it be?” My immediate answer: Virgil Flowers. John Sandford has written a lot of books, and I’ve read most of them. I followed Lucas Davenport religiously through the Prey books, read the standalone
Show More
novels, and didn’t much care for the Kidd novels. But Virgil Flowers is my guy.

Virgil knows how to get to the bottom of things, and in Bad Blood, the bottom is not only complicated, it’s a long way down. A southwest Minnesota farmer is brutally murdered at the elevator as he delivers his soybeans. The murderer, a decent young man from a good local family, confesses to the sheriff, and the next day is found hanging in his cell. When the deputy on duty during the apparent suicide is also found dead, the sheriff realizes she needs help. Though both deaths appear to be suicides, the forensic evidence suggests otherwise. Enter Virgil Flowers.

Flowers loves women. Married and divorced three times, Virgil has realized he falls in love too easily and has sworn off the taking of vows. That doesn’t mean he’s given up the fairer sex, though. In this book, he finds the sheriff herself, recently abandoned by her husband for another woman, to be not only an excellent investigator, but excellent in other ways as well.

Virgil’s investigative technique is as unusual as he is. Raised nearby, the son of a Lutheran minister, Virgil knows how things go in small towns. He takes the sheriff to the local café, speaks clearly enough that the locals can overhear, and garners several important leads through the resulting firestorm of rumor and innuendo. He sets traps, calls in favors, interviews locals, and uncovers a crime so old and so massive that even he has trouble believing its scope.

While I’ve always enjoyed Mr. Sandford’s Lucas Davenport novels, I can understand why he’s working on this series as well. Virgil Flowers is very different from Davenport, and must be tremendously fun to write. He’s both a cerebral and a spiritual guy, a BCA agent who wears his hair long and his cowboy boots scuffed. If you haven’t tried these books, please do. You won’t be disappointed.
Show Less
LibraryThing member SunnySD
Murder, suicide? Or murder, murder... Newly elected sheriff Lee Coakley needs some back-up. Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension agent Virgil Flowers (aka, that eff'n Flowers) like the look of her, but the case gets nastier the longer he stays in Warren County.

Sanford ups the ick factor in
Show More
this suspenseful thriller. Who-dun-it's no mystery. Who's going to live through it, is.
Show Less
LibraryThing member MarkPSadler
In the latest Virgil Flowers investigation, we follow the detective as he investigates the bludgeoning death of a soybean farmer by a local teen. When the teenager is then found hanging in his cell, a victim himself of a murderous prison guard who in turn is found dead under suspicious
Show More
circumstances, Flowers has his hands full proving these where all murders not accidents or suicides.
The ensuing investigation brings to the fore a religious organization, World of Spirit, Teutonic in its nature and calling, that has been ongoing since its conception over a hundred years ago when German immigrants settled in southern Minnesota and northern Iowa. At the core of its beliefs are home-schooling, segregation from the outside world and inter-family marriages. In modern times, this has led to incest, wife swapping, and with the introduction of pornography on the Internet, sexual perversion. Flowers is able to tie in the death of a teenage girl, a sect member, who was suspected of being a prostitute, into the other three murders and all hell breaks loose.
As more and more perversions are discovered as cult members scramble to cover their tracks, Flowers and the local sheriff, Lee Coakley, are carrying on their own tumble-in-the–bed affair behind the scenes, trying to keep that out of the view of the small town gossips.
A rough and tumble sexy page-turner of a thriller that will keep you involved and engaged with each turn of the page.
Show Less
LibraryThing member DrLed
Synopsis: A young man, who everyone agrees was a 'good kid', bludgeons a farmer to death. He is arrested and subsequently found hanged in his cell. Virgil is called in when the local sheriff believes it's not suicide but murder. They find that this is just a hint of the depravity that's going on in
Show More
a cult.
Review: Parts of this book were hard to read, but there were lighter parts, as well. It reminds me of the Waco cult and the effect that religious group had on their children.
Show Less
LibraryThing member slavenrm
As usual, I received this book from a GoodReads giveaway. It's also worth noting that this novel belongs to a genre that is normally not among those I pick up for frequent perusal. Because of this I'm reviewing a bit outside my ken.

In a nutshell, Sandford's novel is about as pulpy as it gets:
Show More
gritty, action packed and completely unapologetic about it. Despite the fact that this is not a genre I tend to pick up, and I'm not likely even now to start, I did find myself dragged along quite against my will once having started. Sandford's style is marvelous and it's obvious that he's been doing writing in this vein for quite some time. Easily the best I've read in the crime-action genre.

My only real complaint is that he does tend to go over the top. His dramatic conclusion reads more like a scene from a war movie than a police action. If this sort of thing regularly occurs then I'm rather surprised there are any cops left to keep the peace.

That aside, Sandford's writing is solid and his topic engaging. For those who enjoy work in the CSI realm this is a grand example of the genre.
Show Less
LibraryThing member ecw0647
An excellent addition to the Virgil Flowers series, a series I prefer to the Lucas Davenport books which often devolve into psychobabble with Weather and Ellen.

The case begins with the baseball bat head-bashing murder of a local farmer delivering soybeans to the local mill. The killer is a
Show More
well-liked football star and his actions puzzle the community, but not as much as the string of killings that follow. BCA detective Flowers is asked to help with the investigation by the local newly elected sheriff who fears her election at the expense of one of her deputies might compromise the investigation.

If you read the reviews on Amazon, the one-star comments seem to fall into a couple of groups: those who object to "bad" words and/or the subject matter (child abuse and its connection to a religious cult or it's just "pornography", a bizarre complaint indeed), and those who complain about the Kindle price (get a life folks, you don't have to buy the book.) In other words the one star reviews have little substance to them and can be safely ignored as trite.

Some of the dialogue, especially with the children of the cultish group, seemed forced and whether such a group could be as large as it was in a rural community without raising more than a few eyebrows is problematic. It's a good story. My quibbling minor complaint is that perhaps Sandford could have used the story to examine the ramifications of a mindset that teaches a belief system to children they believe to be good that is in direct opposition to normal societal values.

One line I really liked: "Nothing scares a shit-kicker like somebody shooting up his truck."
Show Less
LibraryThing member jamespurcell
That F***in Flowers is sent to investigate a murder in very rural SW Minnesota. Very quickly, the crimes mushroom and he is investigating, not three but four deaths in a very small area. An attractive and recently divorced sheriff is locally in charge. It is ideal, well almost, he doesn't bring his
Show More
boat so no fishing, as Virgil uncovers decades of spousal and child abuse within a local church group. Hooking up, in the current vernacular, with the sheriff; he exposes the the cult's activities. To which, they respond with extreme vigor and violence.
Show Less
LibraryThing member Tatoosh
Sanford turns in a thoroughly enjoyable read—and a decided improvement over the previous offering—in this fourth novel featuring Virgil Flowers. Here Flowers is initially drafted to investigate a case of a supposed suicide by a young athlete charged with the murder of a middle-aged farmer. The
Show More
case quickly morphs into an investigation of a religious "cult" that is suspected of rampant sexual molestation of children as young as 12 years old. The plotting is suitably complex and the reader is challenged to determine how Flowers will solve the case. Gone is the fascination with obscure band t-shirts but this novel takes place in winter so I imagine the t-shirts will surface again in the next novel set in suitable weather. Virgil's irritability attraction to women is still apparent and a bit tedious. Everything considered, however, this is the best Virgil Flowers novel yet.
Show Less

Awards

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

2010-10

Physical description

405 p.; 4.25 inches

ISBN

9780425243930

Barcode

1600667
Page: 0.414 seconds