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Review: The Silence of the Lambs

                     

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The Silence of the Lambs by Thomas Harris

 

The Silence of the Lambs

By Thomas Harris

Visit Thomas Harris' Website

 

The Character of Hannibal Lecter plays a bigger part in The Silence of the Lambs than he did in Red Dragon. But for me, it is trainee FBI agent Clarice Starling that steals the show. When reading The Silence of the Lambs the reader also gets to know the character of Jack Crawford a little better. Crawford turned up throughout the first book, but in this, its sequel, it is easier to develop empathy for him.

In Red Dragon it was Crawford that persuaded Will Graham to help track down the killer that the books name relates to. In a similar fashion, in The Silence of the Lambs, it is Crawford that enlists the help of Clarice Starling in obtaining an interview from Lecter. Starling agrees to Crawford's request and goes to see Lecter. After this initial meeting a strange bond, of sorts, develops between the two and it continues throughout the rest of the book.

Starling's initial brief is to get Lecter to fill in a questionnaire. Lecter refuses to do this, but he does show an interest in helping her track down the serial killer Buffalo Bill.

When Starling and Lecter meet for the first time Buffalo Bill has already killed five women. All five bodies were found dumped in water and they had been, to various extents, skinned. As the story unfolds a greater insight is attained into what kind of a man Bill is, and I think that it is safe to say that he is one sick puppy.

There are some great characters in The Silence of the Lambs. My favourites are Starling, Crawford and, sorry got to say it, Dr Lecter - Hannibal the Cannibal has a certain panache. There are a few characters that I found suitably annoying as well: Senator Martin, for instance, and her flunky Krendler. The person that really wound me up the wrong way though was Lector's Jailer Dr Chilton. But you need a few characters to hate in a novel. As for Buffalo Bill, I wanted to see him get what was coming to him, but somehow he just didn't get on my nerves as much as Chilton etc.

After finishing reading The Silence of the Lambs I sat and wondered if the book could be enjoyed by someone that has not read the previous novel. I must say that, in my opinion, it could. Very easily in fact, and as a stand alone piece of work it could hold up its own with no trouble at all. I do think, however, that if a reader was to read this book first and then did decide to read Red Dragon later it might spoil the feel of the first book. In the first book the reader is introduced to the characters of Lecter and Crawford, in the second book the reader gets to know them a lot better and becomes better acquainted with what makes them tick. If the reader was to read the books out of sync it would almost be a case of having two great characters, that the reader knows, and then treating them more like strangers.

I bought a double volume containing The Silence of the Lambs along with its predecessor Red Dragon. Each story was about 420 pages long and if I had to pick a favourite it would be The Silence of the Lambs. There is not much more that I can say about the book because I don't want to give too much of the plot away. What I will say is this: I think that the closing paragraph from The Silence of the Lambs is one of the best that I have ever read. It's no good skipping ahead to it though. One of the reason that it works so well is because gives the reader a sense of completion to things that they have already encountered during previous chapters of the book. In a way the whole book could be a build up to the ending. It's beautiful.

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