Dead Last

“James W. Hall will scare your Florida tan white in two heartbeats, yet leave your admiration intact.”

— Thomas McGuane

From an acclaimed “master of suspense” (New York Times Book Review) comes a thriller in which Thorn must confront an assassin whose victims and methods are taken directly from the script of a popular TV show.

Overview

April Moss writes obituaries for the Miami Herald. Her son, Sawyer, also a writer, has been scripting a cable TV series called “Miami Ops” and has been using his mother’s work as a central element of the show’s storyline. In “Miami Ops,” a serial killer is using obituaries published in the local paper as a blueprint for selecting his next victims.

But midway through the season, a copycat appears off-screen, a real-life killer who is using the same strategy to select victims. When this serial killer crosses paths with the reclusive Thorn, he has no choice but to leave his sanctuary in Key Largo and join forces with a young policewoman from Oklahoma who is investigating the murders.

In addition to the show’s head writer, April’s other son, Sawyer’s twin brother, works on “Miami Ops” as the lead actor. Could one of them be involved in the killings? Or are they orchestrated by the director of the TV series, an aging mogul who badly needs a hit? And what about the female star of the show, a deliciously strange young woman who seems willing to do anything to promote her career.

Thorn walks into this hotbed of entertainment business intrigue totally unprepared for the life-altering shocker he’s about to face. This loner from Key Largo has brought down his share of killers, but he’s never confronted one that was his own flesh and blood.

With the pacing of a thriller, and the lyrical prose for which Hall is renowned, this story pits Thorn against a killer—or killers—whose motives are as elusive as their identities.

Praise

Dead Last is a mystery with multiple layers, with Thorn pursuing a ruthless and clever killer as well as diving into his own past — two paths that will have a shocking convergence.”St. Petersburg Times

“Thorn, that Key Largo loner whose renegade style always gets results, has written another page-turner, this time with a surprising twist…”Valerie Ryan, Shelf Awareness

“Hall combines crisp prose, solid psychology, sardonic humor, and glimpses of an edgy, fast-changing Florida into a suspenseful and satisfying whole.” — Publishers Weekly on Dead Last

Read The Whole Thorn Series

I gathered material for Dead Last while visiting the set of TV series Burn Notice.

James on Writing Dead Last

As is often the case, I rubbed two very different subject matters together to come up with the idea for Dead Last. At a library event I bumped into Matt Schudel, a journalist friend who formerly wrote feature stories for the Florida Sun-Sentinel. He told me he’d moved to the Washington Post and was writing obituaries. I asked him how it felt to be an obituary writer. (I was under the impression that he’d suffered a demotion.) He told me that it was the most challenging and invigorating writing he’d ever done. So I immediately began to read his obituaries and was impressed. To capture the richness and emotional heft of a person’s life in a few hundred words is an amazing feat when it’s done well. This began a several month period of research in obituary writing in general.

The other subject I was interested in at the time was TV production. One of my former students and now friend, Terry Miller, was having a very successful career in Hollywood. He was assistant first director on major films like Ace Ventura, Die Hard, and Lethal Weapon. At the time I was planning the new novel, Terry was producer of the TV series, Burn Notice, being shot in Miami. Terry invited me to the set and some of the material I gathered during those visits helped shaped the storyline of Dead Last.

Forging a connection between obituary writing and TV production may seem weird and incongruous, but that’s just the kind of challenge that stirs my creative juices.

I’d never written a straight out serial killer novel before, and I had my doubts that I could bring anything new to the genre. But when Thorn discovers that he has not one but two sons he didn’t know he had, I realized I was writing something more than a simple whodunit.

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