Editors Reads
Broken Prey by John Sandford — book cover
beginner

Broken Prey — Lucas Davenport #16

by John Sandford · Berkley · 416 pages ·

4.1
Reviewed by James Hartley

A killer is torturing and murdering victims with terrible precision, and the clues suggest he is enacting the fantasies of three of the most notorious serial killers ever locked away in a Minnesota security hospital. To catch him, Lucas Davenport must consult the very monsters whose dreams the killer is making real.

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Editors Reads Verdict

Broken Prey, the sixteenth Lucas Davenport novel, is among the series' darkest and most ingenious, pitting Davenport against a killer enacting the fantasies of three institutionalized serial killers. The forensic-psychiatric premise — and Davenport's chilling consultations with the imprisoned monsters — give it a disturbing brilliance.

4.1
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What We Loved

  • An ingenious, disturbing premise
  • Chilling consultations with imprisoned killers
  • A forensic-psychiatric angle
  • Among the series' darkest and best

Minor Drawbacks

  • Graphic, disturbing violence
  • A grim, intense tone
  • The mid-2000s setting shows its age

Key Takeaways

  • A killer can make others' fantasies real
  • Understanding evil requires consulting it
  • The imprisoned can still do harm
  • Forensic psychiatry has a dark edge
Book details for Broken Prey
Author John Sandford
Publisher Berkley
Pages 416
Published January 1, 2005
Language English
Genre Thriller, Crime Fiction, Mystery, Fiction
Difficulty Beginner
Best For Lucas Davenport readers; fans of dark, ingenious serial-killer thrillers.

How Broken Prey Compares

Broken Prey at a glance against 3 similar books readers weigh alongside it.

Comparison of Broken Prey with similar books by rating and ideal reader
Book Author Rating Best for
Broken Prey (this book) John Sandford ★ 4.1 Lucas Davenport readers
Hidden Prey John Sandford ★ 3.9 Lucas Davenport readers
Invisible Prey John Sandford ★ 3.9 Lucas Davenport readers
Mind Prey John Sandford ★ 4.2 Lucas Davenport readers

A Killer’s Inspiration

Broken Prey, the sixteenth Lucas Davenport novel, is among the series’ darkest and most ingenious entries, built on a genuinely disturbing premise. A killer is torturing and murdering victims with terrible precision, and as Davenport investigates, the clues suggest something uniquely horrifying: the killer is enacting the fantasies of three of the most notorious serial killers ever locked away in a Minnesota security hospital. The murders are not the killer’s own invention but the realization of other monsters’ dreams, and to catch him, Davenport must consult the very killers whose fantasies are being made real — entering the security hospital to question the imprisoned monsters whose imaginations the killer is enacting.

The premise is ingenious and disturbing. A killer who makes others’ fantasies real, who enacts the dreams of institutionalized serial killers, gives Broken Prey a uniquely horrifying conceit, the murders connected to the imaginations of imprisoned monsters. A killer can make others’ fantasies real, and the novel’s central horror is the realization of evil dreamed by one and enacted by another. The forensic-psychiatric angle — the connection between the free killer and the imprisoned ones, the enactment of institutionalized fantasies — gives the novel a dark intellectual brilliance, the investigation requiring Davenport to understand the minds of multiple monsters.

Consulting Monsters

The novel’s most chilling element is Davenport’s consultations with the imprisoned serial killers. To catch the killer enacting their fantasies, Davenport must question the monsters themselves, entering the security hospital to consult the very minds whose dreams are being made real. Understanding evil requires consulting it, and Davenport’s interviews with the institutionalized killers — brilliant, manipulative, dangerous even in captivity — give the novel a disturbing power. The imprisoned can still do harm, their fantasies enacted by a free killer, their manipulations reaching beyond their cells, and Davenport’s consultations with them are among the series’ most chilling scenes.

These consultations give Broken Prey a forensic-psychiatric depth distinct from the series’ usual procedurals. The imprisoned killers are vivid, frightening creations, their intelligence and manipulation making them dangerous interlocutors, and Davenport’s navigation of their minds — extracting information while resisting their games — gives the novel a psychological intensity. The connection between the free killer and the imprisoned ones, the enactment of institutionalized fantasies, raises questions about the nature of evil and its transmission, and the dark forensic angle distinguishes the book. Forensic psychiatry has a dark edge, and Broken Prey explores it fully.

A Dark, Ingenious Hunt

Broken Prey is a dark, ingenious hunt, the pursuit of the killer enacting others’ fantasies unfolding with the momentum the series does well, complicated by the forensic-psychiatric puzzle. Davenport must catch a killer whose murders are inspired by imprisoned monsters, and the investigation requires both procedural skill and psychological insight, the connection between the free and imprisoned killers giving the hunt an intellectual dimension. The ingenious premise, the chilling consultations, and the disturbing violence combine into one of the series’ darkest and most distinctive entries.

The novel is graphic and disturbing, the violence — the torture and murder enacted from serial killers’ fantasies — genuinely unsettling, and the tone grim and intense throughout. Readers sensitive to graphic violence should be warned; Broken Prey is among the darkest Prey novels. But the disturbing material is the source of the book’s power, the ingenious premise and the chilling forensic angle giving it a brilliance the lighter entries lack. Sandford’s sharp prose and relentless plotting carry the dark hunt, and the mid-2000s setting, while dating the book, gives it a specific texture. The combination of an ingenious premise and chilling consultations makes Broken Prey a standout.

A Dark Standout

Broken Prey is among the best and darkest Lucas Davenport novels, and its strengths are the ingenious premise, the chilling consultations with imprisoned killers, and the forensic-psychiatric angle. The killer enacting others’ fantasies gives the novel a uniquely horrifying conceit, the consultations with the imprisoned monsters give it disturbing power, and the forensic angle gives it intellectual brilliance. The graphic violence and the grim tone are considerations, but the ingenious premise and the chilling depth distinguish it as a standout.

Sandford’s sharp prose and relentless plotting carry the dark hunt, and the forensic-psychiatric premise gives it brilliance. Broken Prey is the series at its darkest and most ingenious, anchored by a killer enacting institutionalized fantasies and chilling consultations with imprisoned monsters, among the finest and darkest entries in the Prey series.

Where It Sits in the Series

Broken Prey is the sixteenth Lucas Davenport / Prey novel, following Hidden Prey and preceding Invisible Prey. It reads well in sequence, though it works as a standalone. For readers tracking the Prey series, it is among the darkest and most ingenious entries.

Among the Prey novels, Broken Prey stands out as one of the darkest and most ingenious, built on the disturbing premise of a killer enacting institutionalized serial killers’ fantasies. It is a dark forensic-psychiatric hunt anchored by chilling consultations with imprisoned monsters, demonstrating Sandford’s gift for ingenious, disturbing premises and delivering one of the series’ darkest standouts.

The conceit at the heart of Broken Prey — a killer enacting the fantasies of others — raises genuinely unsettling questions about the nature and transmission of evil, and that intellectual dimension lifts it above a routine serial-killer thriller. The novel suggests that monstrousness can be a kind of inheritance, passed from the imprisoned to the free, that even locked away the worst minds can reach out and make their dreams real through a willing instrument. Davenport’s consultations with the institutionalized killers force him — and the reader — to engage directly with these minds, to understand evil in order to defeat it, and Sandford renders those interviews with a chilling specificity that makes the imprisoned monsters as frightening as the free killer. It is a premise that could have tipped into lurid exploitation, but Sandford’s interest in the forensic psychology behind it gives the horror a disturbing intelligence, and the result is one of the most ingenious entries in the entire Prey series.

Our rating: 4.1/5 — Among the darkest and most ingenious Lucas Davenport novels, pitting Davenport against a killer enacting the fantasies of three institutionalized serial killers he must consult to catch.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is "Broken Prey" about?

A killer is torturing and murdering victims with terrible precision, and the clues suggest he is enacting the fantasies of three of the most notorious serial killers ever locked away in a Minnesota security hospital. To catch him, Lucas Davenport must consult the very monsters whose dreams the killer is making real.

Who should read "Broken Prey"?

Lucas Davenport readers; fans of dark, ingenious serial-killer thrillers.

What are the key takeaways from "Broken Prey"?

A killer can make others' fantasies real Understanding evil requires consulting it The imprisoned can still do harm Forensic psychiatry has a dark edge

Is "Broken Prey" worth reading?

Broken Prey, the sixteenth Lucas Davenport novel, is among the series' darkest and most ingenious, pitting Davenport against a killer enacting the fantasies of three institutionalized serial killers. The forensic-psychiatric premise — and Davenport's chilling consultations with the imprisoned monsters — give it a disturbing brilliance.

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