The Day

Kope takes a risk, but it pays off

- By BRUCE DeSILVA

“Shadows of the Dead,” the third thriller in Spencer Kope's “Special Tracking Unit” series, opens with a car crash, the discovery of a bound woman in the trunk, and the arrest of a seemly deranged driver.

The prisoner proclaims that he intended to “fix” the woman, that she is “number eight” and that he is doing the bidding of “the Onion King.” Concluding that there may be seven more victims and another bad guy out there, Magnus “Steps” Craig and Jimmy Donovan, partners in the FBI's Special Tracking unit, set out to hunt them down. The unit specialize­s in finding people, alive or dead, and Steps has a special ability that makes him unnaturall­y good at it.

When Steps was 8 years old, he got lost in the woods and nearly died of hypothermi­a. That changed his brain, causing him to see people as colors. Kope is referencin­g synesthesi­a, a condition in which the senses get mixed up, leading people to “taste” words or “see” music as colors.

Kope takes this to a fantastic extreme. His hero sees every individual as a unique color, and those colors remain on everything they touch for years — a huge advantage for a man who makes his living as a tracker. Jimmy is the only person Steps has told about this.

Although Kope does not inspire comparison­s to Joseph Wambaugh, his prose style is remarkably good for a career law enforcemen­t official who currently works as a crime analyst for the Whatcom County, Washington, sheriff's office. He speaks to the reader in an engaging, chatty voice, as if telling the story to his best friend.

 ?? MINOTAUR/AP PHOTO ?? “Shadows of the Dead” by Spencer Kope Minotaur
MINOTAUR/AP PHOTO “Shadows of the Dead” by Spencer Kope Minotaur

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