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A remarkable new character--and an extraordinary new thriller--by the author of the 'Prey' series. Anna Hatory runs the night crew. A Wisconsin farm girl on the streets of L.A., she and her small band of video freelancers roam the city in their truck from ten to dawn, looking for news: accidents, robberies, murders, anything they can sell to the local stations or networks. It's an exhilarating life . . . until the day two deaths shake their world. BOMC Main Selection.
Now Sandford presents his fans with a remarkable new heroine in an extraordinary new thriller, The Night Crew. A departure from the Prey series, The Night Crew boasts a whole new cast of characters — and a brand-new level of suspense.
Anna Batory runs the night crew. Small, dark-haired, shy but tough, a Wisconsin farm girl on the streets of Los Angeles, she roams the city with her small band of video freelancers in their truck from ten to dawn, looking for news — accidents, robberies, murders, demonstrations — anything they can shoot and sell to the local stations or the networks. It's an exhilarating life...until two deaths hit Anna close to home.
One night, when Anna's crew is filming a suicide jumper who falls five stories to his death, Jason, her fill-in cameraman, is strangely affected. The next morning, Jason is found murdered on a beach. At first the police think that the deaths are unrelated, but too many coincidences and clues keep linking the deaths and leading back to Anna, revealing the dark truth of an obsessed madman. Through a series of bizarre and harrowing events, ghostsofAnna's past are stirred up and revealed to be intrinsically linked to the lives of Jason and the suicide jumper. Anna's world becomes as cold and dangerous as the night itself.
John Sandford has written thrilling stories before, but nothing to top the extraordinary suspense and tension of The Night Crew. It is an intense ride, and it is Sandford's most chilling novel yet.
bncom
Q: What are the first lines of literature or poetry that come to mind?
A: To be, or not to be; that is the bare bodkin
That makes calamity of so long life;
For who would fardels bear, till Birnam Wood do come to Dunsinane,
But that the fear of something after death
Murders the innocent sleep,
Great nature's second course
And makes us rather sling the arrows of outrageous fortune
Than to fly to others that we know not of.
Q: Describe one thing in life that you have done but are glad you never have to do again.
A: Almost everything -- but I once solo paddled a canoe down the Mississippi from the source in northern Minnesota to the Gulf of Mexico. Sixty-nine days of mostly misery, which I remember fondly, and would never, ever do again....
Q: Can you recall the most sensuously indulgent meal you've ever had? What was it, and can you share the recipe?
A: Nope. Not into food. Probably a candy bar someplace ugly. I have a deep-seated affection for Almond Joy -- despite their habit of being half-melted when you get them -- but I don't know why. Maybe therapy would bring it out.
Q: How does journalism and writing novels compare? Are you still involved in journalism?
A: The key difference -- and I mean this seriously, as it is the one problem that most journalists can't deal with -- is length. Most journalists are unable (for lots of different reasons, including boredom) to create a unified whole story that stretches out 100,000 words or more and takes months of actual writing time. I still do occasional journalism and would like to do more. I consider myself a newspaper guy on a long coffee break.
Q: We have heard you are involved with an archaeological dig. How did you get started?
A: Ah, my favorite subject. For the Internet-enabled, which I guess everybody here would be, check www.rehov.org for an extended rundown, with pictures, of the dig. I've had a lifelong reading interest in history and archaeology (most recent work read: the three-volume Byzantium by John Julius Norwich), and in fact majored in history and lit in college. I got serious about archaeology a few years back, went around looking at digs and sites, last year spent some hard time on a dig at Beth Shean in Israel, and now I'm involved in a heavy way with a new dig at a place called Tel Rehov, which is a half an hour by car south of the Sea of Galilee.
Q: What is it like?
A: It's very hot, dusty, butt-kicking work, and totally fascinating. Last year we cleared the iron age walls of Beth Shean, which are the very walls (well, okay, maybe) where the Philistines hung the bodies of King Saul and his sons after they killed them in a battle near Mt. Gilboa.... This year we've got a bit of a mystery on our hands: a very large, untouched tel, obviously the remains of a city, but a city we know hardly anything about. We surveyed it this spring, found pottery from the bronze through the Ottoman eras, which covers the better part of 3,000 years...great stuff. And we're looking for volunteers -- see the web site.
Q: The Night Crew is clearly not a Prey novel. Why? Are you currently writing a Prey novel, or do you plan to do something else for a while?
A: I am currently writing a Prey novel. The Night Crew was meant as a break after eight years of Lucas Davenport, but now I'm back, and this one feels pretty good. I don't know if I'll go back to the Night Crew again, but it is a possibility. I liked the Anna Batory character, and Creek, and I'm not sure I'm done with them.
Anonymous
Posted November 29, 2006
Anna Batory is a witty, tough, ambitious video freelanceer who roams around the streets of L.A. looking for shots she could sell to stations offering the highest bid. One suspenseful night that involves 2 deaths and an animal-rights activists. After a drug over-dosed teen jumps off a balcony, it hits one of anna's cameramen hard and takes off early. He turns up dead on a beach the morning and there is no real leads. She meets up with former L.A. cop Jake Harper, who is the high school kid's dad. He and Anna find mysterious connections between Jake's son's death and the death of Anna's crewmen. They continue to find clues that bring them closer to the psychotic killer. The book was a decent read, the story was slow to start though. The complex plot is also kind of difficult to follow. The story uses the 'damsel in distress' style also, that is used in tv and books everywhere. The book seems like anyother, nothing unique about it.
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Posted October 18, 2002
Does anyone know if there is a follow up to "Night Crew"?
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Overview
A mobile unit of video freelancers prowls the streets to sell the footage they capture to the highest network bidder. It is an exhilarating life. But tonight, two deaths will change everything.A remarkable new character--and an extraordinary new thriller--by the author of the 'Prey' series. Anna Hatory runs the night crew. A Wisconsin farm girl on the streets of L.A., she and her small band of video freelancers roam the city in their truck from ten to dawn, looking for news: accidents, robberies, murders, anything they can sell to the local stations or networks. It's an exhilarating life . . . until the day two deaths shake their world. BOMC Main Selection. ...