The Naked Eye is the New York Times bestseller from Iris Johansen and Roy Johansen How can you catch a killer when everyone thinks he's dead? Kendra Michaels was instrumental in bringing serial killer Eric Colby to justice. And yet, despite his apparent execution at San Quentin, Kendra is convinced that Colby is still alive. The problem is that she can't prove it. Even her razor-sharp powers of observation-developed to an amazing capacity during the twenty years she spent blind and now in constant demand by law enforcement agencies-have gotten her nowhere. But then a reporter who very publicly humiliated Kendra is murdered. Visiting the crime scene in search of anything that might link the brutal homicide to Colby, Kendra instead finds evidence that points to her. Finally Colby's master plan becomes clear to her: he is framing Kendra for murder. Suspicions mount and Kendra is thrust into deadly pursuit to clear her name and catch the killer no one believes exists anymore. A killer who is always nearby, watching, waiting to make his next move, even as everyone believes him to be dead. A killer whose trail of destruction is invisible to the naked eye, despite the carnage he leaves in his wake. It will take everything Kendra has to find and stop Colby--and save her own life one more time.
"Tawada's slender accounts of alienation achieve a remarkable potency."--Michael Porter, The New York Times
Charles Saatchi's new book based on extraordinary unphotoshopped images
THE STORY: Alex DelFlavio is an ambitious downtown artist who plans to include sexually explicit photographs in his uptown show to advance his career.
The Naked Eye
"James Sowell introduces us not only to the night sky - some of the major constellations, the Moon and eclipses, planets, easy deep-sky objects - but also daytime phenomena, such as rainbows and sun dogs.
Vince had a theory about invisibility.
When the Lollipop Murderer strikes again, Gaia and Kim are on the case, but when all leads point to a suspect that Gaia desperately wants to trust, she finds herself in conflict with her partner.
The first time Morris has written about himself since his autobiography "Animal Days" (1979). Desmond Morris wrote his autobiography "Animal Days" recounting his life up to 1967 when he published...
Desmond Morris, the renowned natural historian, describes his travels around the world in fascinating and often hilarious detail, together with the observations about human behavior to which they give rise.
Polaris stays put as the sticky stars turn in circles about it. Substitute the southern pole star, Sigma Octantis, for Polaris and the same demonstration applies. All this reveals itself to skywatchers who make friends with the stars.