Recenzii
"A
book-length
war
of
nerves
that
accentuates
the
best
of
Mr.
Perry’s
gift
for
using
pure
logic
and
gamesmanship
to
generate
breathless
nonstop
suspense...The
Informantis
a
marvel
of
tight,
thoughtful
construction."
—Janet
Maslin,New
York
Times
"Maybe
you’ve
heard
of
him.
Named
after
the
foster
father
(Eddie
the
Butcher)
who
taught
him
his
trade,
and
introduced
almost
30
years
ago
by
Thomas
Perry
in
"The
Butcher’s
Boy,"
this
cold-blooded
professional
killer
is
one
of
the
immortals
of
the
genre.
Michael
Schaeffer,
to
give
his
antihero
his
current
alias,
seemed
a
bit
mechanical
when
he
briefly
came
out
of
retirement
two
decades
ago
in
"Sleeping
Dogs,"
but
he
makes
a
great
comeback
in The
Informant (Otto
Penzler/Houghton
Mifflin
Harcourt,
$27)
–
older
wiser
and
deadlier.
Perry
has
to
exert
himself
to
engineer
a
reunion
between
Schaeffer,
who
has
surfaced
from
anonymity
to
defend
himself
from
the
mafia
good
squads
that
have
taken
a
sudden
interest
in
him,
and
Elizabeth
Waring,
a
hyper-vigilant
honcho
with
the
Department
of
Justice
whose
fondest
desire
is
to
turn
Schaeffer
into
a
government
informant.
But
once
these
uneasy
civilities
are
attended
to,
the
Butcher’s
Boy
is
free
to
kill
again,
in
his
own
distinctly
cruel
and
inventive
way.
The
fun
thing
about
his
professional
methods
is
how
low-tech
they
are.
That’s
poetic
justice
for
a
target
like
Frank
Tosca,
an
old-school
underboss
who
has
called
an
extraordinary
meeting
in
Arizona
to
convince
the
fractious
leaders
of
the
big
crime
families
that
he
can
revitalize
the
mafia
and
lead
it
into
a
new
golden
age.
While
everyone
is
on
high
alert
for
marauders
brandishing
advanced
weapons
of
war,
the
Butcher’s
Boy
quietly
sneaks
into
Tosca’s
cabin
and
slits
his
throat
with
a
hunting
knife
he
picked
up
at
a
sporting-goods
store.
Perry’s
immaculate
style
–
clean,
polished,
uncluttered
by
messy
emotions
–
suits
the
Butcher’s
Boy,
who
executes
his
kills
with
the
same
cool,
dispassionate
skill.
But
this
time
there’s
something
almost
human
about
his
awareness
of
the
limitations
imposed
by
his
aging
body.
Luckily,
one
of
the
lessons
he
learned
from
Eddie
is
that
"killing
was
mostly
a
mental
business.
It
required
thinking
clearly,
not
quickly."
And
his
mind
is
still
sharp
enough
to
devise
the
kind
of
ingenious
logistical
traps
a
young
computer
gamer
could
only
dream
of."
—Marilyn
Stasio,New
York
Times
Book
Review
"Edgar-winner
Perry's
excellent
third
Butcher's
Boy
novel
(after
Sleeping
Dogs)
pits
the
Butcher's
Boy
(aka
Michael
Schaeffer),
an
impeccably
effective
hit
man,
against
his
old
nemesis,
Elizabeth
Waring,
an
impeccably
honest
Justice
Department
official.
Though
Waring's
boss,
arrogant
political
appointee
Dale
Hunsecker,
tries
to
hamstring
her,
Waring
wants
to
bolster
her
20-year
pursuit
of
Mafia
bosses
by
turning
the
Butcher's
Boy
into
America's
most
important
informant.
Waring
soon
enters
into
an
intricate
pas
de
deux
with
a
man
who
considers
death
a
buy-sell
commodity.
Meanwhile,
this
icy
yet
strangely
appealing
killer,
who
reads
Waring
as
well
as
she
reads
him,
methodically
murders
capo
after
capo
and
their
"made
men"
across
the
country,
the
only
way
he
can
safely
return
to
his
quiet
retirement
in
England
with
his
beloved
wife,
Meg.
Perry
offers
a
compelling,
rapid-fire
plot,
credible
Mafia
and
FBI
secondary
characters,
an
indictment
of
self-serving
officialdom,
and
the
old
soul-shattering
moral
dilemma:
what
is
truth?"
—Publishers
Weekly,
STARRED review"Twenty
years
after
a
trio
of
lowlifes
forced
him
out
of
retirement
(Sleeping
Dogs,
1992,
etc.),
the
Butcher’s
Boy
is
back.
When
you’re
a
professional
killer
who
works
freelance,
your
employers
are
likely
to
include
a
large
number
of
nasty
guys.
So
it’s
not
clear
to
Perry’s
nameless
hero,
who
started
calling
himself
Michael
Schaeffer
when
he
moved
to
England
and
settled
in
Bath
as
the
husband
of
Lady
Margaret
Holroyd,
which
of
his
former
associates
sent
the
three
men
who
inadvertently
flushed
him
out
of
hiding
and
then
tried
to
kill
him.
He
has
no
trouble
tracing
the
three
to
midlevel
New
York
capo
Michael
Delamina,
whom
he
kills
on
page
two.
In
order
to
identify
Delamina’s
boss,
however,
he
has
to
consult
his
old
nemesis,
Elizabeth
Waring
of
the
Justice
Department.
Taking
a
leaf
from
Hannibal
Lecter’s
playbook,
he
urges
her,
'Tell
me,
and
I’ll
tell
you
something.'
When
Elizabeth
fingers
rising
under-boss
Frank
Tosca
as
Schaeffer’s
next
target,
he
gives
her
some
juicy
information
on
an
old
Tosca
murder
in
return.
But
although
"he
had
never
failed
to
accomplish
his
goal
when
all
it
entailed
was
killing
someone,"
her
news
comes
too
late
to
help.
By
the
time
Schaeffer
kills
Tosca,
the
ambitious
under-boss
has
convened
a
sit-down
in
which
his
counterparts
from
across
the
country
have
agreed
to
join
his
vendetta
against
the
Butcher’s
Boy—a
goal
Tosca’s
death
only
makes
them
more
eager
to
pursue.
For
her
part,
Elizabeth
is
so
determined
to
bring
Schaeffer
into
the
Witness
Protection
Program
as
the
ultimate
informant
that
she’s
willing
offer
him
a
series
of
unauthorized
deals,
which
of
course
he
spurns.
Schaeffer
is
squeezed
between
two
collective
adversaries
with
virtually
unlimited
personnel
and
resources.
On
the
other
hand,
only
Schaeffer
is
the
Butcher’s
Boy.
Beneath
the
sky-high
body
count,
the
twisty
plot
is
powered
by
Perry’s
relentless
focus
on
the
question
of
where
the
next
threat
is
coming
from
and
how
to
survive
it."
—Kirkus,
STARRED
review
"I've
said
elsewhere
that
Thomas
Perry's
novels —the
best
ones —
are
a
master
class
in
thriller
writing.The
Informantshould
be
the
newest
addition
to
that
syllabus,
read
for
devouring
first,
and
analysis
thereafter."
—Sarah
Weinman,Los
Angeles
Times
Extras
1It
was
MondayHeavy
footsteps,
coming
quickly.
He
could
tell
from
their
nearness
that
the
first
ring
would
have
been
enough.
The
door
swung
open.
The
man
was
taller
than
he
was,
younger
and
thicker
around
the
chest.
The
man
glowered,
and
the
space
between
his
dark
eyebrows
and
his
dark,
wavy
hair
looked
very
small,
pinched
and
wrinkled
with
annoyance.
"Mr.
Delamina?""Yeah.
What
can
I
do
for
you?""I’ve
got
a
delivery
for
you.""I
didn’t
order
anything."
He
prepared
to
close
the
door."It
looks
like
a
gift."
He
held
up
the
clipboard.
The
invoice
was
filled
out
in
big,
clear
letters.
Under
quantity
it
said
"1
ea."
Under
description
it
said
"Sony
Bravia
EX500,"
and
under
amount
it
said
"$2,199."
But
below
that
in
big
block
letters,
it
said
paid."Are
you
sure
it’s
the
right
address?"
He
was
a
bit
suspicious,
but
he
had
seen
the
invoice,
and
his
greed
had
been
stimulated.
He
was
thinking
it
might
be
a
mistake,
but
somehow
he
could
still
end
up
with
something
valuable."Yes.
You’re
Michael
Delamina?""Right."
Delamina’s
small
eyes
moved
to
the
truck
then
to
the
invoice,
not
finding
a
reason
not
to
be
interested."Then
you
got
a
new
high-definition
flat
screen.
I
need
to
take
a
look
at
where
it
goes."
He
stepped
up
on
the
porch,
and
something
about
his
brusque,
hurried
manner
made
Delamina
step
backward,
letting
him
inside.It
was
a
large,
modern
kitchen
with
black
granite
counters
and
a
black
granite
island,
with
an
array
of
copper
pots
hanging
from
a
rack
above
it.
He
took
two
steps
inward
and
swerved
to
go
around
the
island.
As
he
passed
it,
his
free
hand
plucked
one
of
the
black-handled
kitchen
knives
from
a
slot
in
the
butcher
block
beside
the
cutting
board.
As
he
had
expected
from
the
width
of
the
slot,
it
was
the
boning
knife.
When
he
was
working,
the
proper
tools
seemed
to
find
their
way
to
his
hand.He
pivoted
to
the
left
and
brought
the
knife
around
so
his
body
added
force
to
the
thrust,
and
the
eight-inch
blade
was
lodged
to
the
handle
in
the
space
just
below
Delamina’s
rib
cage.
He
stepped
forward
with
it
and
pushed
upward.
As
he
did,
he
said
quietly,
"I’m
the
one
you
sent
people
to
find.
Go
join
them."
Delamina
went
limp,
fell
onto
the
kitchen
floor,
and
lay
there,
his
eyes
open
and
losing
focus.He
stood
above
Delamina
for
a
moment,
watching.
He
was
fairly
sure
that
his
upward,
probing
thrust
had
reached
the
heart.
This
was
a
crude,
elementary
way
of
killing
a
man.
It
was
actually
one
of
the
things
that
prison
inmates
did
to
one
another.
When
they
pushed
a
blade
upward
they
tried
to
move
it
around
a
bit,
like
a
driver
manipulating
a
standard
transmission,
so
they
called
it
"running
the
gears"
on
someone.
But
he
hadn’t
wished
to
have
Delamina’s
death
look
like
expert
workmanship.
That
might
warn
the
next
one
that
he
had
come
back
to
take
care
of
this
problem.
He
stepped
to
the
rack
by
the
sink,
took
a
clean
dish
towel,
and
wiped
off
the
handle
of
the
knife.
He
knelt
on
the
floor
for
a
moment
and
looked
more
closely
at
Delamina.The
heart
and
the
lungs
had
to
be
stopped.
The
human
body
could
take
an
incredible
amount
of
battering,
piercing,
even
burning,
and
heal
rapidly
and
go
on
with
undiminished
strength
for
another
forty
years.
For
a
pro,
death
had
to
happen
right
away
with
no
uncertainty.
Before
he
left,
the
person
had
to
be
dead—not
dying,
but
dead
and
cooling
off.
He
couldn’t
have
somebody
get
up
after
he
was
gone.
None
of
his
ever
had,
but
it
was
a
concern.He
put
his
hand
on
Michael
Delamina’s
carotid
artery
to
be
sure
his
heart
had
stopped,
then
tugged
a
button
from
Delamina’s
shirt,
extracted
a
few
inches
of
thread,
and
held
the
thin,
white
filament
in
front
of
his
nostrils.
The
thread
didn’t
move.
He
dropped
it
on
Delamina’s
chest
with
the
button,
touched
the
artery
one
more
time,
stood,
and
walked.He
went
out
the
side
door
of
the
house
and
got
into
the
plain
white
van.
He
had
parked
so
close
to
the
side
door
that
he
only
had
to
take
two
steps
and
he
was
in
the
driver’s
seat
behind
tinted
windows.
He
had
a
red
shop
rag
caught
in
the
back
door
of
the
van
so
it
hung
down
to
cover
the
license
plate.He
backed
out
of
the
driveway,
shifted
and
accelerated
to
a
moderate
speed,
and
proceeded
down
the
street.
After
he
had
gone
a
mile
or
two,
he
turned
into
the
parking
lot
of
a
supermarket,
drove
around
to
the
rear
of
the
building,
got
out,
and
stuffed
the
rag,
the
coveralls,
and
the
clipboard
into
a
bag
in
the
Dumpster.
He
pulled
back
onto
the
road
and
merged
into
the
traffic
again.
He
drove
carefully
and
lawfully
as
he
always
did,
and
never
risked
having
a
cop
pull
him
over.
He
wore
the
blue
baseball
cap
and
a
pair
of
sunglasses,
because
he
knew
that
if
anyone
saw
him
through
the
windshield,
what
they’d
remember
was
a
baseball
cap
and
sunglasses.
In
twenty
minutes
he
was
twenty
miles
away,
and
in
forty
he
was
in
another
county
at
the
lot
where
he
had
rented
the
van
a
couple
of
hours
ago.
He
returned
it
and
drove
the
rented
car
he
had
left
on
a
nearby
street
toward
the
airport.The
distinguishing
feature
of
the
killing
business
was
its
premeditation.
Most
amateurs
got
caught
because
they
were
too
inexperienced
to
look
far
enough
ahead.
They
made
plans
to
kill
some
enemy,
but
didn’t
devote
much
thought
to
what
they
would
do
with
the
body.
Some
of
them
didn’t
even
think
clearly
about
their
alibis.
It
was
as
though
the
killing
itself
were
a
high
wall
ahead
of
them.
They
thought
so
much
about
having
to
climb
it
that
they
couldn’t
get
their
eyes
to
focus
on
what
was
beyond
it.Even
the
ones
who
bothered
to
construct
alibis
often
made
foolish
mistakes.
They
would
go
to
a
movie
and
pay
with
a
credit
card,
sneak
out
in
the
middle
of
the
film
to
do
the
killing,
and
then
get
caught
on
a
security
camera
driving
back
into
the
parking
lot.
Or
they’d
kill
their
wives
and
then
call
their
girlfriends
on
their
cell
phones,
and
the
phone
company
would
have
a
record
of
which
repeater
tower
picked
up
the
signal.When
they
didn’t
make
mistakes,
they
still
had
trouble.
The
truth
was,
if
you
were
the
police
department’s
favorite
suspect,
almost
any
set
of
precautions
you
took
would
be
inadequate.
If
there
was
no
real
evidence
of
guilt,
the
police
would
start
finding
fibers
in
your
car
or
house
that
were
"not
inconsistent"
with
the
fibers
in
the
dead
man’s
clothes
or
carpets.
A
pro
was
never
the
cops’
favorite
suspect,
because
he
had
no
clear
connection
with
the
victim.He
knew
a
lot
about
the
business
because
he
had
been
raised
in
it.
His
parents
had
been
killed
in
a
car
crash
when
he
was
ten.
His
nearest
relative
was
his
mother’s
younger
sister,
who
was
in
college
in
California
and
barely
made
it
to
the
funeral.
She
had
no
room
in
her
schedule
for
raising
anybody’s
ten-year-old
child.
But
a
neighborhood
man
named
Eddie
Mastrewski
had
volunteered
to
take
the
boy
in,
teach
him
some
values
and
the
habit
of
work.
Eddie
was
the
local
butcher,
a
man
who
drove
a
good
car,
lived
in
a
good
house,
and
had
a
reputation
for
honest
weights
and
fresh
meat.In
those
days
in
a
working-class
neighborhood,
no
one
thought
much
about
it.
There
was
a
boy
who
needed
a
home
for
a
few
years,
and
Eddie
had
one.
In
later
years,
the
boy
suspected
that
the
reason
nobody
had
worried
that
this
lifetime
bachelor
might
be
a
child
molester
was
the
neighborhood’s
whispered
knowledge
that
Eddie
regularly
made
home
deliveries
of
special
cuts
of
meat
to
a
few
particularly
attractive
housewives.Eddie
Mastrewski
did
exactly
as
he
had
promised—provided
a
safe,
happy
home
and
taught
the
boy
his
trade.
The
part
that
the
neighbors
didn’t
know
was
that
Eddie
the
Butcher
wasn’t
just
a
butcher.
He
was
a
professional
killer.The
boy
had
been
a
good
learner.
As
a
teenager
he
had
a
photograph
on
his
wall
taken
by
a
news
photographer
in
Vietnam.
In
the
foreground
there
was
a
procession
of
people
at
some
sort
of
religious
festival.
They
were
walking
along,
some
beating
drums,
some
with
their
mouths
open
wide
singing,
some
with
their
heads
bent
in
prayer.
But
behind
them
was
a
glaring
bright-orange-and-crimson
explosion
spreading
into
the
air
like
a
monstrous
flower
blooming.He
knew
from
Eddie
that
the
photograph
must
have
been
taken
during
the
two-tenths
of
a
second
after
the
bomb’s
initiator
had
ignited
the
explosive,
but
before
the
minds
of
any
of
the
paraders
could
apprehend
the
change.
The
bomb
had
already
gone
off,
but
none
of
these
people
had
yet
heard,
felt,
or
seen
anything
happen.
That
was
still
in
their
future.The
boy
had
spent
a
great
deal
of
time
over
the
next
few
years
thinking
about
those
two-tenths
of
a
second.
If
he
could
deliver
a
disabling
blow
in
those
two-tenths
of
a
second,
the
adversary
would
literally
never
see
it
coming,
never
know
what
happened
to
him
until
he
was
down.Eddie
made
sure
the
boy
was
proficient
with
knives,
shotguns,
rifles,
and
pistols
of
the
common
brands
and
calibers.
When
the
boy
was
fifteen,
Eddie
began
to
take
him
out
on
weekend
jobs.
When
he
turned
sixteen,
he
quit
school
and
worked
with
Eddie
full-time.
That
was
when
he
had
advanced
from
apprentice
to
journeyman.Killing
was
mostly
a
mental
business.
It
required
thinking
clearly,
not
quickly.
Picking
the
time
and
place
long
before
he
went
out
to
do
a
job
gave
him
the
chance
to
study
the
way
it
should
be
done,
to
find
the
best
shooting
angle,
and
become
familiar
with
all
of
the
entrances
and
exits.
Before
the
time
came,
a
professional
killer
could
arrange
almost
everything
in
his
favor.
He
could
come
through
like
a
gust
of
wind—there
unexpectedly,
then
gone—and
after
he
disappeared,
leave
an
impression
rather
than
a
memory.Eddie
had
taught
him
that
"It’s
the
passion
that’s
missing,
and
that
protects
you.
You
kill
somebody
because
someone
else
hates
him.
The
only
time
you
have
to
feel
anything
is
if
you
make
a
mistake
and
he
gets
the
chance
to
fight
back.
Then
he’s
your
enemy
and
your
adrenaline
flows
until
he’s
dead."Amateurs
were
all
passion.
Amateurs
would
plan
the
killing
up
to
the
moment
when
their
enemies
died
and
then
turn
stupid.
They
thought
it
would
end
then,
that
they’ll
toss
the
knife
or
gun
away,
go
back
to
their
houses,
take
a
shower,
and
stuff
their
clothes
in
the
washing
machine.Amateurs
didn’t
think
about
the
fact
that
as
soon
as
the
body
was
found,
they
had
potent
new
enemies,
the
cops.
And
cops
looked
for
connections
between
victims
and
their
killers.
Nine
out
of
ten
murders
were
done
by
somebody
the
victim
knew.
How
many
people
could
the
average
person
know?
The
average
person
could
only
hold
five
hundred
faces
in
his
memory.
So
at
the
moment
when
the
victim
hit
the
ground,
the
world’s
six
billion
people
narrowed
down
to
only
five
hundred
suspects.
The
police
would
look
at
how
the
killing
was
done.
If
it
required
a
lot
of
strength,
the
killer
was
a
man;
about
two
hundred
and
fifty
of
the
five
hundred
were
eliminated.
Two-thirds
of
the
remaining
two
hundred
and
fifty
would
have
good
alibis.
Make
that
eighty
suspects.
A
quarter
of
them
were
too
young
or
too
old.
Make
that
sixty
suspects.
By
now
the
amateur
was
beginning
to
feel
a
little
sick.
The
pro
would
already
have
counted
his
money
and
be
on
the
way
to
his
next
job.
He
was
one
of
the
six
billion
who
had
already
been
eliminated.He
turned
into
the
car-rental
return
outside
La
Guardia,
returned
his
car,
and
rode
the
shuttle
bus
to
the
terminal.
The
people
who
saw
him
noticed
only
another
middle-aged
man
with
brown
hair
graying
a
bit
at
the
temples,
who
wore
the
nearly
universal
travel
uniform
of
such
men—a
dark-colored
sport
coat
with
gray
or
beige
pants,
a
blue
shirt
without
a
tie,
and
rubber-soled
shoes.
There
was
no
reason
to
look
at
him
closely,
nor
did
he
look
at
them.
Everyone
on
a
shuttle
bus
to
an
airport
was
on
the
way
to
somewhere
else,
and
thinking
well
ahead
into
a
different
time
and
place.It
was
afternoon
when
he
drove
the
white
van
up
the
driveway
and
stopped
it
at
the
side
door
of
the
house.
He
pulled
his
blue
baseball
cap
down
securely,
leaned
to
the
seat
beside
him,
and
picked
up
the
aluminum
clipboard
with
its
layers
of
invoices.
As
he
slid
down
from
the
seat
to
the
driveway,
he
reached
into
his
blue
coveralls
and
retrieved
a
ballpoint
pen.
He
hadn’t
had
the
time
to
stop
and
pick
up
the
perfect
tools
for
this,
but
what
he
had
would
probably
do.
If
not,
people
often
had
the
right
things
around
the
house.
He
rang
the
doorbell,
listened
for
footsteps,
then
rang
again.