
The Cul-De-Sac by Christopher Null
About The Book:
In a woodsy backyard on a lonely
cul-de-sac in Northern California, away from prying eyes, veteran serial
killer Klaus Fischer quietly buries his victims. Determined to quit the
killing game after years and years of murdering women, he decides that
his neighbor Peg Jurgensen, a middle-aged widow, will be his final
victim. But when new neighbors arrive, the dynamics change. The body
count rises. Can anyone on this street be trusted?
Award-winning journalist Christopher Null’s newest book, The
Cul-De-Sac, draws readers into a thrilling page-turner with plenty of
“we’ve gotta talk about it” twists.
While Klaus circles his prey, the arrival of a new family on the
cul-de-sac - the first new residents in years - generates plenty of
excitement, particularly from Peg. She's especially enthused about
Eliza, the teenage member of the van Damal clan, who's trying to make
friends in her new school while struggling with math. On a lark, Eliza
turns to another neighbor, the troubled Alex, a shut-in who suffers from
a mysterious disability, convincing him to become her math tutor.
It isn't long before it becomes clear that Klaus isn't the only one on
the cul-de-sac with secrets he doesn't want revealed, but none of that
can stop Klaus' bloodlust from finally boiling over on one fateful
night. And that's when things on the cul-de-sac get really weird.
The fast pace of The Cul-De-Sac sees chapters toggling among the points
of view of different characters, giving readers glimpses into the
unsettling secrets and dangers lurking behind closed doors and
inside troubled minds. The Cul-De-Sac ultimately begs the question: How
well do you really know your neighbors?
About The Author:
Christopher Null is an award-winning journalist, editor, and novelist. He
is widely known as the editor of the popular wine and spirits website
Drinkhacker.com, launched in 2007, and was the founding editor of
Filmcritic.com, which was launched in 1995 and was acquired by AMC
Television in 2009. He worked as a top editor for PC Computing, Smart
Business, and New Architect magazines early in his career and was the
founding editor of Mobile PC magazine in 2003, the first-ever periodical
focused exclusively on mobile technology.
Null’s first novel, Half Mast, was published in 2002 and was heralded
as “the best of contemporary American fiction” by the New York
Resident. His 2005 book, Five Stars!, a how-to guide for aspiring film
critics, has been used as a textbook for film criticism curriculum at a
number of colleges and universities. It was reissued in 2013 in its
second edition.
~Hayley
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