98 reviews for:

Bad Blood

John Sandford

3.98 AVERAGE

dark emotional mysterious sad tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

The darkest case but my favorite Flowers book

Pretty run-of-the-mill murder mystery. It’s what I call a candy novel. Would I read more of this series? Yeah, maybe, but only if there isn’t anything better to read.
dark mysterious tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

This felt like a variant of one of the early Lucas Davenport books made more extreme. Arguably it's the most transgressive entry I've read yet in either the Davenport or Flowers series. I also think it's also one of the best. In one of the earliest entries, I wondered why those who write reviews were so hesitant to mention the content of the books despite their relative popularity and high ratings. Now I understand. Perhaps one of the many reasons for the hesitancy is that is we can trust ourselves to be reading for the "right reasons", but we can't trust others to be doing so.

I also wrote that I thought it would be rather difficult to have published the early books today, and maybe that would still be true, though for different reasons than this book's content. Maybe this would have difficulty being published today, 2022, as opposed to in 2010 as well, or be controversial if it were in the spotlight. As I've written before, it can be difficult to know how various sorts of transgression will be received. It could be some of the transgression is mitigated by none of it being written as it occurred, let alone none of it being perpetuated by a viewpoint character, but rather as all being described as having happened, often in a clinical way.

I have to wonder if Flowers will have a new woman to have sex with every book, or if that'll eventually change as it did with Davenport. I don't mind either way, but at some points it does seem a bit forced. Flowers was so capable at detecting lies that I thought this was the TV series, "Lie To Me", and sure enough this was published in the middle of its airing. The book was so intense and engaging that my mind didn't wander to consider any of its flaws, which I also didn't mind, and certainly helps its rating. Some people dislike that sort of method, it's especially prevalent in various sorts of movies, but I know what I'm reading and why.

If the books continue to be around this level of quality, they'll definitely be on par with, if not better than, the Davenport series. On that note, I had was going to be reading one of each in the series once per month to finish at the end of the year, but I changed my mind again and will be finishing them both in October 2022 when the next book in the series is scheduled, so a few months faster.

Rating: 4.5/5
dark emotional sad tense medium-paced

Fourth in the Virgil Flowers detective mystery thriller series and revolving around that effin' Flowers, lol. Bad Blood takes place in October in Minnesota.

In 2011, Bad Blood won the ITW Thriller Award for Best Hard Cover Novel. And I completely understand why. I'd give it a "7" if I could.

My Take
Holy cats! H-0-L-Y cats!! This one will have your jaw dropping below the floor! The drama and tension will keep your heart racing as well as your eyes and fingers as they turn pages as fast as possible. Sandford certainly trips you up as he slowly and quickly twists you around.

Yeah. That's what I said. Slowly and quickly. Slowly you find out why Bobby killed that farmer. Quickly you begin to suspect the overall crimes within Bad Blood. It could take a strong stomach to get through this.

I finally figured out why everyone calls him that fuckin' Flowers is because he's too good at what he does. Virgil says it's just "cop alliteration". He does make a good point about that early suicide in the story. Never really thought about how a guy might, um, present himself in such a situation, but it does make sense. Then again, Lee Coakley sure appreciates him, lol. Virgil, that is.

Virgil does have an unexpected way of investigating murder. He likes to blab all about their leads, to see what might happen. And his background as a preacher's son comes in right handy in this.

In some ways, I can understand why the Catholic Church was so upset when Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press. Ya let anybody read the Bible, interpret it the way they want, and it can become a nightmare.
"I'll tell you what, Emmet, reading the Bible for the … parts is not really reading the Bible."
Perverts will use any excuse…

I can't believe these religious idiots, how quickly they leap to blame others. I understand why, but it still astonishes me. I did have to laugh about the "minor pie fight" over why the World of Spirit kids scored at the top of academic achievements. Yep, you got it. Everyone decided the other kids in Minnesota would score just as well if teachers got paid more, lol.

The Story
One late fall Sunday in southern Minnesota, a farmer brings a load of soybeans to a local grain elevator — and a young man hits him on the head with a steel bar, drops him into the grain bin, waits until he's sure he's dead, and then calls the sheriff to report the "accident".

Suspicious, the sheriff calls in Virgil Flowers, who quickly breaks the kid down...and the next day the boy's found hanging in his cell. Remorse?

Virgil isn't so sure, and as he investigates he begins to uncover a multigeneration, multifamily conspiracy — a series of crimes of such monstrosity that, though he's seen an awful lot in his life, even he has difficulty in comprehending it...and in figuring out what to do next.

The Characters
Agent Virgil Flowers, a preacher's son, works as a detective-at-large (but doesn't carry a gun) for the BCA. His true love, however, is writing articles on hunting and fishing. Mrs. Wilson is Virgil's neighbor.

The Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) is…
…is a state police organization. Lucas Davenport is Virgil's boss. Beatrice Sawyer, Don Baldwin, and Mary Lopez are the scene-of-crime investigators. The hippie-ish Sandy is an excellent researcher. Rose Marie Roux is the commissioner of public safety and Lucas' boss. Shrake and Jenkins are BCA thugs.
"I've never been overgunned. I have been undergunned. After that happened, I reconceptualized."
Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation
Agent Bell Wood and Mitch Ingle worked the Kelly Baker murder. Janice.

Warren County
Homestead is its county seat with Dennis Brown as its chief of police and Lee's former boss. The Yellow Dog Café where Virgil spends a lot of time is owned by Bill Jacoby. Earl and Dick Street are some of the customers at the diner. Pat Sullivan is a gay reporter. Clare Kreuger delivers the mail. Rich is a photo technician with a tip. Brian and Judy Craig are farmers with some interesting insight. Peter Van Mann is a widower farmer who got reamed; Jake is his dog. Son Wood owns Son Wood's Surface Sealers and was a friend of Crocker's. Roger works for him. Delores is Son's chatty bookkeeper.

The nineteen-year-old football jock, Bob Tripp, works at the Battenberg Farmer's Co-op. George and Irma Tripp are his parents. Maicy is a student. Jay Wenner was a friend of Bobby's.

Sheriff's Department
The divorced Lee Coakley is the new sheriff in town and has three kids. (Sue is one of the boys' girlfriend.) Ike Patras is the medical examiner in Mankato. Deputies Gene Schickel and Gregg Dunn will back up Virgil and Lee. More deputies include John Kraus, Buddy, Marcia Wright, Rob, Don, Sherry, and Bob Hart. Stupek. Deputy Jimmy Crocker was on duty the night of the suicide; he was also a childhood friend of Flood's. Harlan is the previous sheriff.

Bill Clinton and Andersson are highway patrolmen. Sheriff Beau Harrison in Martin County will need to lend jail space. Larry Cortt is a friend of Hart and his wife, Jenny. Darrell Martin is Lee's private attorney. Judge John O'Hare is tight-lipped; Doris is his wife. Harris Toms is the county attorney.

The World of Spirit is…
…a religion brought from Germany back in the 1900s. Leonard and Louise Baker were Kelly's parents. John and Luanne Baker were her uncle and aunt. Jacob "Liberty" Flood is married to Alma. Edna and Helen are their precocious daughters. Emmet Einstadt is Alma's father and the head of the World of Spirit. Leonard and Junior are his sons. Mary is Leonard's wife. Wally Rooney will be moving into the Floods' house. Kathleen Spooner is Crocker's ex-wife.

Harvey Loewe has his own secrets and a desperate need to run. Joe and Marsha Loewe are his parents. Greta and Karl Rouse are really into it, and Karl loves photography. Kristy Rouse is the helpful daughter. The Bochers, Steinfelds, Beckers, Muellers, John McGuire, Ted Morgan, and Loren are fellow worshippers. Dick and Mary Bosche and Dick and Sandy Waldt had slid right in. Jacky Shoen.

Lucy "Birdy" McCain Olms is one who got away. Roland "Rollo" Olms was her jerk of a husband. Birdy's family included her parents, Ed and Ruth; her brothers Robert and William; and, Louise McCain Gordon. Charlie Lane is a cop in Sleepy Eye. Gina Becker is an old friend of Louise's.

Good Shepherd Lutheran Church
The Reverend John Baumhauer is an old friend of Virgil's dad. Danny McCoy used to be the Catholic priest in Homestead.

Hayfield is…
…a town where Virgil worked a case some time back. Clay Holley wants to help out. Marie is Clay's girlfriend. The Johnsons, Pells, and Schooners are all retired neighbors who can't wait to help as well.

Nebraska State Patrol
Lieutenant Joe Murphy knows how to get to Lenore Mackey's house.

Tom Parker is a very good defense attorney. Laurie is his associate and connects the murders. Richard Reedy was a slick guy from Marshall, Virgil's hometown.

The World of Law is the real world.

The Cover and Title
The cover reminds me of an Old Master oil painting with that gorgeous and atmospheric landscape with its lone barn set back behind the field and surrounded by hills and trees. The painting covers not quite half of the cover's bottom while the author's name — in a dull gold and white against a black background — is embossed and taking up the top half with a tiny bit of series information banding the middle.

Oh, yeah, the title is definitely about Bad Blood in this community.

This was my first Virgil Flowers book (I know, out of order - how could I) but it was on Scrib'd and having just read two Davenport books, I wasn't ready to move away from the genre just yet.
It's a good book, as some of the reviews below have said, it is more than a bit 'eew' in places but the subject matter is sensitive and to many, we're going to think its grim!
The story line developed very quickly, and I thought that solving the 'murder' so early on in the book was a bit of a let down. However, it allowed other events to play out and allowed for the big confrontation scene at the end of the book, with guns blazing etc. etc.
It's a fast read, and I did get confused with all the names of the murder victims, but I blame myself. I should read more slowly and pay more attention, but as that's never going to happen, I just have to deal with it when there's a large cast of characters.
I like that Davenport crops up as a bit character.
I'd liken it to being in the style of a Harlan Coban 'Myron Bolitar' book and as such, I'm not going to complain or moan too much. The books are a bit silly in places, a bit of fun in others. Read it, enjoy, but remember it is more than a bit 'eew' in places!
dark mysterious sad tense fast-paced

Another good book by John Sandford. Quick paced - fast read - but darned entertaining. If you like his other books, you'll probably like this one, too.
dark tense fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated

Fast paced, wish more was going on than the main story line which you start out with immediately, graphic