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Another brilliant Virgil Flowers thriller from the #1 "New York Times" bestselling author.

One late fall Sunday in southern Minnesota, a farmer brings a load of soybeans to a local grain elevator- and a young man hits him on the head with, was it a steel bar?, and then drops him into the grain bin as he first waits until he's sure he's dead, and then calls the sheriff to report the "accident." Suspicious, the sheriff calls in Virgil Flowers, who quickly breaks the kid down.

The next day the boy is found hanging in his cell. Remorse? Virgil isn't so sure. As he investigates, he begins to uncover a multigeneration, multifamily conspiracy - a series of crimes of such monstrosity that, though he's seen an awful lot in his life, even he has difficulty in comprehending.

More importantly, he has to figure out what to do.

Librarian's note: as of 2021, there are 13 volumes in the author's Virgil Flowers series. The last was published in April 2021. It is part of the "Prey" series but Lucas Davenport and Virgil Flowers share the billing - "Ocean Prey."

388 pages, Hardcover

Published September 21, 2010

About the author

John Sandford

200 books9,067 followers
John Sandford was born John Roswell Camp on February 23, 1944, in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. He attended the public schools in Cedar Rapids, graduating from Washington High School in 1962. He then spent four years at the University of Iowa, graduating with a bachelor's degree in American Studies in 1966. In 1966, he married Susan Lee Jones of Cedar Rapids, a fellow student at the University of Iowa. He was in the U.S. Army from 1966-68, worked as a reporter for the Cape Girardeau Southeast Missourian from 1968-1970, and went back to the University of Iowa from 1970-1971, where he received a master's degree in journalism. He was a reporter for The Miami Herald from 1971-78, and then a reporter for the St. Paul Pioneer-Press from 1978-1990; in 1980, he was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize, and he won the Pulitzer in 1986 for a series of stories about a midwestern farm crisis. From 1990 to the present he has written thriller novels. He's also the author of two non-fiction books, one on plastic surgery and one on art. He is the principal financial backer of a major archeological project in the Jordan Valley of Israel, with a website at www.rehov.org In addition to archaeology, he is deeply interested in art (painting) and photography. He both hunts and fishes. He has two children, Roswell and Emily, and one grandson, Benjamin. His wife, Susan, died of metastasized breast cancer in May, 2007, and is greatly missed.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,442 reviews
Profile Image for Kemper.
1,390 reviews7,453 followers
February 13, 2015
There’s not enough ‘W’s in the world to convey the ‘EWWWWWWWWWW!!’ factor of this book.

In Homestead, Minnesota, a young man just out of high school with a bright future brutally murders a farmer and tries to make it look like an accident. However, his crime is discovered, and he’s found dead in his cell before he can explain why he did it. The boy's death looks fishy, and the chief suspect is a deputy that the new female sheriff just defeated in an election for the job so that’s a political shitstorm just waiting to happen. The sheriff comes to Virgil Flowers (a/k/a ‘that fucking Flowers'), agent of the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, for assistance. When Virgil starts digging into the case he finds some very shocking secrets and more than one person willing to kill to keep them.

John Sandford delivers once again. Virgil is a spin-off character from Sandford’s Prey-series featuring Lucas Davenport, and while I’ve always liked this character, I hadn’t found any of the Virgil-based books quite as entertaining as the Davenport ones until now. There’s an intriguing mystery followed by some twisted revelations and then a series of intense and exciting action scenes. This was one bad-ass crime thriller.

Virgil has always been fun reading as the outdoorsy ladies man who favors vintage rock band t-shirts and sometimes forgets his gun in his truck, but he's turning into a more fully formed character instead of just a collection of traits. Now I can’t wait until we see Virgil again instead of just thinking of him as an entertaining placeholder between Davenport novels.

Random Thoughts

* Davenport is starting to be a bad influence on Virgil because he does some highly illegal breaking-and-entering in this one, and he comes up with an elaborate scheme that puts a civilian in danger to flush out some of the bad guys. Those are some classic Davenport moves.

* I continue to love the interactions between Davenport and Virgil, especially the way that Davenport’s more ruthless political side comes out when he’s giving Virgil his marching orders.

* Virgil’s background as a minister’s son comes in handy when he gets to drop some serious Bible-knowledge on folks.

* After 30 books, you’d think that Sandford would start to seem repetitive when it comes to describing brutal Minnesota winters, but he can still make me feel the wind chill.

* Sneaky Virgil pulls a nice small-town trick by talking about the investigation openly in a diner. Before long, he’s drawing crowds who are anxious to hear the gossip, but he gets a lot of information and goodwill in return. Plus, he gets to stir up public opinion in a way that is beneficial to his investigation.

* Again, just let me say, “EWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW!”
Profile Image for James Thane.
Author 9 books7,017 followers
May 3, 2020
When Bobby Tripp, a popular high school athlete, brutally kills a farmer late one night at a grain mill in rural Minnesota, there seems to be no logical explanation for the crime. Bobby fails in his attempt to disguise the murder as an accident and is arrested. Shortly thereafter, he is found hanging in his cell, an apparent suicide.

Lee Coakley, an attractive divorcee who is also the local sheriff, appeals for help from Virgil Flowers of the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. Coakley wants Virgil to investigate what role, if any, Jim Crocker, the deputy on duty, might have played in Bobby's suicide. Virgil agrees to help out and is immediately immersed in a complex situation involving a number of related crimes, many of which seem to center on the members of a secretive religious group in the small rural community.

With that, the book is off and running, and the reader is hopelessly trapped in a story that he or she will have great difficulty putting down before the conclusion. Flowers, who has often been described as a younger, single version of Sandford's long-time protagonist, Lucas Davenport, is a great lead character and this is another very entertaining read. Very few writers are capable of successfuly combining humor with a series of grizzly, unspeakable crimes, but Sandford is one of the few who pulls it off without seeming to trivialize the brutal crimes that are at the center of the story. This is a book that will certainly be devoured by Sandford's legion of fans and one that should appeal to anyone who enjoys crime fiction.
Profile Image for Kay.
2,188 reviews1,120 followers
June 29, 2021
A 911 call report of a fatal accident at a grain elevator. However, the medical examiner is 99% sure it's a murder with a blow to the head and no accident. The only person at the scene, a high school football star is arrested for the crime. The following day he's found dead by hanging in his jail cell. Suspicious, Warren County Sheriff Lee Coakley seeks Virgil Flowers to help investigate.

As always John Sandford delivers another great crime thriller. I enjoy his writing and subtle humor where it's needed. Beware this one has some heinous sexual violence content.
Profile Image for Sheyla ✎.
1,925 reviews601 followers
March 25, 2024
Virgil Flowers is called to investigate a crime. A young man has been found dead in his cell of an apparent suicide after hitting a farmer with a baseball bat and then, the cop who worked that night is found dead at home with his pants unzipped.

Virgil's companion in this investigation is Warren County Sheriff Lee Coakley. She won the recent election and has to prove she can solve this series of crimes after the bodies start piling up.

A "church" is in the middle of the investigation. Is sex the reason for the murders or is it child abuse?

I think that John Sandford has made Virgil better and better with each book. The sarcasm, the perfect one-liners, the plot, and the secondary characters crossing over from the Lucas Davenport series all make a perfect winning formula for this novel to be engrossing and successful.

Despite Virgil and Lucas being very different physically and in their personal life, they both share some qualities that humanize them. Their gray areas are so very entertaining

Cliffhanger: No

4/5 Fangs

MrsLeif's Two Fangs About It | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram
Profile Image for Jean.
826 reviews20 followers
July 27, 2016
Let’s get this out of the way right off the bat: Is it possible to review a John Sandford book featuring Virgil Flowers without referring to his Marshall, Minnesota-based investigator as “that f***ing Flowers”? No, it’s not.

Moving right along, then, Bad Blood is the fourth installment in the series that features the blond, truck-driving, boat-hauling, son of a Lutheran minister who works for the Minnesota BCA. When Virgil shows up in the town of Homestead to handle the case of a suspicious death, his reputation precedes him. Then the suspect is found dead in his cell of an apparent suicide, and from there, the plot thickens, as they say.

The subject matter is disturbing. Not only are there multiple murders, but also sexual abuse of both adults and minors. There’s no great mystery here; it is obvious quite early on that there is something very wrong going on in the World of Spirit Church. Rather, the task facing Virgil and Sheriff Lee Coakley is how deep does the abuse go, and how do they prove it?

Despite the very serious subject matter, this book is highly entertaining. Sandford is an excellent storyteller, and Virgil Flowers is not your everyday lawman. He’s a casual, down-home kind of guy who likes to schmooze with the locals and keep them up-to-snuff with what’s happening (sort of) in the investigation – because you just never know what information you might pick up in the Yellow Dog Café. He also doesn’t have great boundaries when it comes to women, so it’s no huge surprise when he and the lady sheriff, both divorced, do their own “under covers” work.

There are lots and lots of names to keep track of in this one, both good guys and bad guys, and that got confusing, especially when the s**t hit the fan. There is a good deal of chaos and violence toward the end, so if sexual abuse and violence bother you, this might be one to skip. The church seemed too exaggerated to me, and I felt that it actually could have been a better story if the abuse had been toned down somewhat. I did like the sections where Virgil quoted Scriptures to church members in his attempts to get them to talk to him. I found myself smiling more than once at his many tactics during the course of this investigation. I sailed through this novel in a day, and I liked it. I liked the local flavor of the book. While Homestead is a fictional town, a town that is briefly mentioned, Sleepy Eye, is not. It happens to be my mom’s hometown, and that was a neat connection for me. I am conflicted about how to rate Bad Blood, since the subject matter was so intense, downright nasty, actually, yet there is humor and comic relief too. All in all, Sandford did a good job of telling the story and keeping me interested.

3.5 stars
Profile Image for Tracy  .
957 reviews12 followers
January 23, 2019
Bad Blood (Virgil Flowers, Book #4) was full of ups-downs and twists-turns.

Virgil's assignment turned out to be exceptionally tough. Very upsetting to learn children were being sexually exploited and abused from very young ages as a common practice within the town church (often by family members) and unfortunately, this is a devasting part of our real-life world. Not an easy topic, yet one we cannot deny and must address.
The way Virgil and his team tackled the problem was realistic. As always, he finds a love interest, continues to be insanely humorous and manages to always get the job done (with his charming Flowers pizazz) when the sh- - is about to hit the fan, and for me, is what makes his series a standout.

Glad I finally got to this book, and plan on continuing with the rest of the series.
Profile Image for Karen Hall.
Author 4 books9 followers
April 20, 2011
Somebody recently asked, “If you could have dinner with any character from fiction, who would it be?” My immediate answer: Virgil Flowers. John Sandford has written a lot of books, and I’ve read most of them. I followed Lucas Davenport religiously through the Prey books, read the standalone novels, and didn’t much care for the Kidd novels. But Virgil Flowers is my guy.

Virgil knows how to get to the bottom of things, and in Bad Blood, the bottom is not only complicated, it’s a long way down. A southwest Minnesota farmer is brutally murdered at the elevator as he delivers his soybeans. The murderer, a decent young man from a good local family, confesses to the sheriff, and the next day is found hanging in his cell. When the deputy on duty during the apparent suicide is also found dead, the sheriff realizes she needs help. Though both deaths appear to be suicides, the forensic evidence suggests otherwise. Enter Virgil Flowers.

Flowers loves women. Married and divorced three times, Virgil has realized he falls in love too easily and has sworn off the taking of vows. That doesn’t mean he’s given up the fairer sex, though. In this book, he finds the sheriff herself, recently abandoned by her husband for another woman, to be not only an excellent investigator, but excellent in other ways as well.

Virgil’s investigative technique is as unusual as he is. Raised nearby, the son of a Lutheran minister, Virgil knows how things go in small towns. He takes the sheriff to the local café, speaks clearly enough that the locals can overhear, and garners several important leads through the resulting firestorm of rumor and innuendo. He sets traps, calls in favors, interviews locals, and uncovers a crime so old and so massive that even he has trouble believing its scope.

While I’ve always enjoyed Mr. Sandford’s Lucas Davenport novels, I can understand why he’s working on this series as well. Virgil Flowers is very different from Davenport, and must be tremendously fun to write. He’s both a cerebral and a spiritual guy, a BCA agent who wears his hair long and his cowboy boots scuffed. If you haven’t tried these books, please do. You won’t be disappointed.
Profile Image for Judith.
51 reviews
May 18, 2011
This book makes me wish for a no stars option.

Normally I enjoy this series both for the pace and the plotting. Not this time. The sexual abuse of women and children is ugly, and perhaps Sandford was trying to make that point. I couldn't help thinking that his depiction of sexual abuse of women and children for the purpose of entertainment (and let's not forget profit) was just as ugly. And it was made worse because I was listening to an audiobook and I couldn't skip over the more graphic sections the way I usually do. Now those images are stuck in my head.

And on a less serious note, the amount of product placement in these books is getting ridiculous. Vehicles, motels, soft drinks, frozen dinners, you name it. It's almost entertaining seeing how he can work discussions of the products into the story lines. The Tahoe/Tundra conversation was so contrived as to be ludicrous. I don't know if this is getting worse, or if I noticed it more because I had to listen to every word.

Profile Image for Patricia Williams.
672 reviews182 followers
April 29, 2020
I finished another Virgil Flowers book. I love these books. He is one of my favorite characters. I also like Will Trent from Karen Slaughter's novels. I try to read every book with him in it also. I have enjoyed John Sandford's book for quite a while and my mystery book club chose to read "Holy Ghost" in April and I realized again how much I enjoyed his books. This book had a lot of excitement and intrigue. Virgil opened up a big sex ring and child abuse ring in a small town that protrayed itself as a church. I could not put this book down. very quick read.
5,372 reviews136 followers
September 20, 2020
5 Stars. Virgil draws a strange one in southern Minnesota. The subject is difficult but he's at his best this time. At heart he's a small town, country boy - the son of a Lutheran minister. He's strayed from the church in many ways, praying yes but with serious questions, yet he can still quote appropriate Bible passages and does so to make you chuckle. For some unknown reason, Bobby Tripp, a teenager working at a grain elevator, hits a home-run with the head of a customer delivering a load of soy beans. When the young man later dies in custody, and it appears the night duty officer may be involved, local sheriff Lee Coakley calls the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension and gets Virgil. Coakley and Flowers begin to ask questions about the gang-rape and death of a teenage girl a year earlier. Is that mysterious, cult-like church, World of Spirit, involved? Flowers just makes me smile. Let me count the ways. One, he's a great detective and, two, he gets into the darndest situations! I wonder if he actually heard Coakley when she said, "Unlike other men, you listen to me when I am talking." Where can I find my next Flowers? (April 2019)
Profile Image for Giovanni Gelati.
Author 24 books885 followers
September 27, 2010

Right off the bat I want to say that I am a huge fan of John Sandford. I have devoured all 20 of his Prey novels and each of the Virgil Flowers spinoffs. There are three other Virgil Flower novels: Dark of the Moon, Heat Lightening, Rough Country and now Bad Blood. Do you have to read them in order? No. Do you need to read them, yes. They rock. I find it incredibly hard to put any of his novels down once I get on a roll. The book just doesn’t want to leave my hand or my mind. Okay, I guess you have to understand that I like the guy’s style and substance.
Bad Blood in my estimation is his best work to date with that %$#@Flowers. The dialogue in between the characters is incredible, the repartee fun and at times intense, and the action swift. I offer no spoilers as usual but here is a sample of the dialogue. ”Yeah, but….not like that. Not like some giant conspiracy. “Clinton said.” Then there was that whole thing about morals and good behavior. I’m not sure exactly… I’d like to know what their definition of ‘moral’ is. I mean ,you smell that place?”
“You mean the soup? It smelled pretty good.”
“I mean the smoke. The dope. The spliff, the ganj. As these good Germans would say, the dank.”
Virgil put a hand to his forehead and rubbed. “That’s what it was. I was thinking it was some kind of herb in the soup.”
“It is some kind of herb, but I don’t think it was in the soup, ”Clinton said,” I think it was in the curtains and the couch and the rugs. I think she was cooking up that soup to cover the odor. Those people are Christian fundamentalist stoners. I was sitting there grinning the whole time, listening to them. They were totally full of $%^&….depending on how you define moral.”
‘What is it with these guys?” Virgil asked. “These church people…I talked to one today who was carrying a gun in her pocket. I think some of them know more about Kelly Baker than they are saying, I think…”
“I’ll tell you what it is,” Bill Clinton said,” What it is, is, something is seriously*&^%%$, I wish you luck in detecting what it is.”
That came from page 125. The novel totally rocks the whole way through. The plotline is excellent and Sandford as his usual self just crafts another intense narrative with Flowers leading the way, turning over stones and pushing things to a conclusion. I really enjoy novels by the heavyhitters in the genre that continue to push themselves and not just mail it in. This is in my opinion the best Virgil flowers stand-alone of the bunch. If you are a fan of this character in any way shape or form then this is going to be a fun ride for you. If you are a first timer, then you are going to be getting an introduction to Virgil Flowers at his best. I would suggest then that you backtrack and pick up the rest after that.
There are some very big novels coming out between now and Christmas, and John Sandford has set the bar very high. Tomorrow I am going to run a post with a preview of novels to come this fall and winter. I can guarantee that this novel will appear in the top 10 if not the top 5 for the quarter when we do our little top 20 list before Christmas. If you are a fan of excellent writing, enjoy a well-crafted plotline, humor, action, and great character driven fiction like I do , then this novel needs to be read. What is your favorite John Sanford novel? Is Lucas Davenport still numero uno or is Virgil working his way there?
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Profile Image for William.
676 reviews386 followers
February 16, 2020
Short reviews of wonderful Virgil, sorry.

This was very good, complex, interesting characters.
Profile Image for Melanie.
174 reviews8 followers
March 9, 2019
That fuckin’ Flowers. Possible 4.5. Really good.
Profile Image for Scott.
535 reviews55 followers
February 6, 2021
After reading through all of John Sandford’s Lucas Davenport “Prey” series, I am now making it through his second series focusing on the ever-popular, Virgil Flowers. After downing the first three in the series, I have finished the fourth book – “Bad Blood” – and am finding that each one just gets better.

Virgil Flowers is in his late thirties, tall, lean, and long haired for law enforcement. He’s been married and divorced three times, but still loves and adores the ladies. He’s an outdoorsman, photographer, and writer in his spare time. Most importantly, his preferred dress style is jeans and indie rock-and-roll band t-shirts. Virgil also works as an investigator for the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, being recruited by Lucas Davenport and reporting directly to him.

When his fourth book, “bad Blood” starts with two deaths occur in Warren County. First, nineteen-year-old high school football star, Bob Tripp, hits a local farmer, Jacob Flood, in the back of the head with his baseball bat. Trying to hide the murder as an accident doesn’t work for Bob, who is arrested for murder following the autopsy. However, the next morning following his arrest, Bob is found in his jail cell dead from hanging himself.

Following these two deaths under watch, Warren County sheriff Lee Coakley seeks assistance from her Minnesota state law enforcement, which motivates Lucas Davenport to send his best man, Virgil Flowers, to investigate the murder and suicide. When Virgil begins to examine what was going on to motivate Bob to kill someone and then kill himself, he finds problems with elements surrounding the suicide and the role of the deputy who was on duty that night at the jail.

Things start to move fast, when another body is discovered. However, it is a third murder dressed up to look like another suicide. Things then get worse when Flowers finds out about an earlier murder of a young fifteen-year-old girl who was found naked in a distant county cemetery and had suffered horrible physical abuse. Flowers and Oakley find themselves facing unspeakable horrors when they discover a small cultish church that appears to involve child abuse, rape, and incest. The leaders of the church are willing to do whatever protect their traditions, even if it means to permanently eliminate Flowers as a threat before he brings to light one of the biggest crimes in the state of Minnesota.

Before I get into my personal thoughts on this book, I must warn you that this book deals with serious subject matter that is way more sensitive and disturbing ways than the themes of the previous three books. It is dark and morbid stuff, dealing with the somber sex abuse of young children. This is not for the faint of heart. What I found unusual is that one of the unique and enjoyable things about reading the Virgil Flowers serious is the sense of humor and sarcastic one-liners that are spread throughout his books. That would seem to be a bit in conflict with the themes of this book. However, Sandford is careful to balance things in a respectful manner and stays in tune with the seriousness of the subject matter he is addressing. Just know this book is intentionally more serious in respect to the subject matter being dealt with.

Four books into this series, Virgil is building on me more and more. I find him easy to relate to and cheer for. He is a great balance to Davenport’s more serious attitude and moralistic drama. I wish I was as laid back as Virgil and appreciate his thoughtful exploration of his philosophical beliefs. He is not perfect and makes mistakes performing his investigative work. He is a hopeless romantic that falls easily for the women he interacts with, but always treats them with dignity, respect, and even a worshipful reverence. There are a lot of things to like about him and his unique character.

As for the plotting, I enjoyed how the book began as a traditional mystery and I was easily immersed in trying to figure what was going on. Then as the plotline got going, it shifted into a different and darker direction that got serious quick, demanding my full attention. Sandford used the serious subject matter to build to a dramatic showdown and climax.

Overall, this was a risky theme for Sandford to take on, and for the most part he made it work well. Just be warned that the topic of sexual abuse is a tough one, especially when it concerns young children. Even with that in mind, Sandford delivers an action-packed and thought-provoking read and I cannot wait to read the next one.
209 reviews51 followers
August 20, 2019
This was the first Virgil Flowers book I’ve read, I didn’t know it was a series (and this is book #4), but it didn’t matter, each of the books stands alone so you can enter the series at any point.

This book is great! Exciting, funny, well plotted, with a nice buildup of tension to the climax. Virgil is a great character, and the situation he deals with in this book is horrific enough to keep anyone riveted to the pages. The other characters are well fleshed out, the bad guys are really bad, and there are multiple twists to keep you guessing. The book is set in Minnesota farm country, where a “good kid” murders someone in cold blood—and then hangs himself. Virgil investigates, only to find the community is a tightknit religious cult, who won’t talk to him. This is one of those less common suspense novels where we, the audience, are let into information about the villains before the hero finds out.

I would recommend to anyone who likes thrillers or mysteries, or people who enjoy Lee Child’s Jack Reacher series, Stuart Woods, Nelson Demille, or Dennis Lehane. This is also a good book for someone who is trying to get into reading and needs something that will hold their attention. It is NOT good if you like to read one chapter and then go to sleep, lol, because it is one that will make you stay up all night to finish!!

Profile Image for Jim.
949 reviews2 followers
May 25, 2012
Dropping a star only because I was uncomfortable with the central plot line - child abuse - and the author's portrayal of it. Sometimes I felt he sailed very close to the edge in his descriptions of what was going on in a vice ring for what was a novel as opposed to a factual account. Some of the words he puts in children's mouths, not to mention the situations he imagines them in, made me squirm a bit. Still, he's not the first to do it and I'm sure he'd argue his story needs to ring true if it's to work. And it does work, because I didn't give up on the book. It was tightly written, had enough levity in it to counterbalance the dark storyline and had really likeable characters as the good guys.
I sailed through the pages and would admit that as a hard boiled thriller it doesn't pull punches, which I like. I've read a lot of American crime fiction and was really surprised I hadn't come across Sandford before. Where has he been all my life? He has a recognisable style of his own and stands apart from the crowd when that's pretty difficult to do in this genre. It's the first book I've read of his, and i'm looking forward to reading more.
Profile Image for Marty Fried.
1,135 reviews114 followers
May 13, 2018
Well, this one was a strange one; it began getting pretty dark toward the end, with lots of bad things happening. This shouldn't be too surprising considering religious extremists were involved. A lot of this is not something you'd expect from religious people, but as someone says in the story, you can interpret the Bible in many ways, and read almost anything you want into it.

Fortunately, there was a lot of very humorous dialog that helps mitigate this dark behavior somewhat, and that's the reason I like this series so much. That and the political correctness of it all. OK, well, Virgil is a bit of a ladies man, and seems to fall in love with every female he comes across. But he doesn't really come on strong, and it works with him.
Profile Image for Jeanette (Ms. Feisty).
2,179 reviews2,102 followers
November 14, 2010
The further adventures of "that fuckin' Flowers." This one takes awhile to heat up, but once they start going after the bad guys it gets pretty exciting. The big showdown and final outcome is sort of like a combination of the Ruby Ridge fiasco and the raid on the FLDS Yearning for Zion compound.
I give Bad Blood 2.5 stars for story, but I rounded up to 3 stars because Sandford writes so well. This one wasn't as much fun as the third installment. The subject matter is very disturbing, all the more because it's so believable. It's disgusting what people justify under the protected status of religious beliefs.
Profile Image for Mal Warwick.
Author 31 books458 followers
April 23, 2018
Any aspiring mystery and thriller writer would do well to study John Sandford's Virgil Flowers novels. The ten books Sandford has written to date (as of March 2018) display several of the characteristics that make them all candidates for the bestseller lists. Bad Blood, the fourth novel in the series, shows them all:

** Like so many other thrillers Sandford has written (there are 28 in his other series, the Prey novels), Bad Blood's plot revolves around a topic that has recently surfaced in the national news: child abuse inside a religious cult. Numerous child abuse cases among Jehovah's Witnesses have come to the attention of law enforcement officials in several countries. The church has refused to share information about the alleged abuse with authorities. The practices of the cult Sandford describes in Bad Blood are apparently far more extreme, and there are no strong similarities between the two faith systems, but the provocative topic nonetheless brings to mind those real-world cases.

** The protagonist, Virgil Flowers, is like no other character in mystery and suspense fiction. He's colorful to an extreme—interesting, in other words. He's a cop who hates guns. He moonlights as a magazine writer. He wears a different T-shirt every day, each of them featuring the logo of an obscure rock band. He has a college degree in environmental science. He's been married and divorced three times, but he falls in love with a different woman in every novel. (In Bad Blood, the new love interest is the sheriff of the county where Virgil is now working.) And, like so many other cops and private eyes in the genre, he breaks the rules. Often.

** Sandford's plots are intricate. Invariably, what might seem at first as a simple case will inevitably turn out to involve numerous crimes—and often a large number of criminals as well. Sometimes, there are several seemingly unrelated cases that come together as the investigation unfolds. (That's the case in Bad Blood, when four separate murders all prove to be closely related.) Sandford does use manipulative techniques, such as disclosing the fact that Virgil has a plan of action but without explaining the plan in any way. But he uses such devices infrequently. For the most part, the logic of the case builds steadily throughout the novel and reaches an explosive climax shortly before the end.

** Sandford's dialogue sings. Virgil's conversations are usually fast-moving and often very, very funny as well. In these novels, the characters obviously don't speak the way people normally speak. But the stories benefit from the illusion that they do. Sandford is undoubtedly a witty man. Here, for example, is Virgil: "'Your eyes sparkle when you're annoyed,'" he said, giving her his second-best cowboy grin. His first-best grin was so powerful that he reserved it for places where the woman had her back against something, for support; like a mattress." (The sexism is Virgil's, or Sandford's. Apologies.)

** There is violence. A lot of it. As a reader, I wish this weren't the case. But clearly these novels wouldn't work otherwise. (The same is true of the work of another bestselling American author, Karin Slaughter, and of the work of the Norwegian writer Jo Nesbo.) In Bad Blood, the focus is on a religious cult child abuse and a long string of murders.

** In the Virgil Flowers series, as in his other works of fiction, Sandford employs an intimate brand of third-person storytelling. We share Virgil's thoughts and feelings consistently throughout the book. Sometimes, we enter the minds of other characters as well. This approach gives the author maximum flexibility.

If you enjoy mystery and suspense fiction, chances are you'll love the Virgil Flowers novels.
Profile Image for John Biddle.
685 reviews60 followers
June 9, 2024
Virgil Flowers #4, Bad Blood by John Sandford was my favorite so far. I'm beginning to like Virgil even better than his boss Lucas Davenport, the most famous of the Sanford Protagonists. The characters are very well developed, likeable and their interactions are believable. I lke these people and enjoy rooting for them as they puzzle out the mystery.

There are three deaths in a very short time in a small town in MN and it turns out there's another that might be related not too far away in Iowa. Lots of good work by Flowers figuring this one out and some nice help by the local sheriff/love interest Lee Coakley. The occassional humor is a particular blessing in this one as the subject matter is particularly distasteful. You really want the good guys to solve this one quickly, but it takes longer than you'd like.

A solid 5 stars for me; Sandford is a master.
Profile Image for Jim.
Author 7 books2,068 followers
September 10, 2018
Another worthy addition to the series, but again the plot was pretty far out & really nasty. It starts with one murder & winds up in a real mess. Some great thinking by Flowers as he navigates the twists & turns.

There were some interesting questions posed. More interesting were some that weren't really. Just how important is public education? It's often put down due to quality, but there is a social element that is too often ignored. Home schooling is pretty big around here, especially by fundamentalist Christians. It's worth thinking about & kind of scary.
Profile Image for Jenn.
1,617 reviews32 followers
October 27, 2015
Another great book by John Sandford. As much as the Prey series is still my favourite, Flowers is a rogue unto himself. He's a one man army who occasionally gets a few of the crew to help him out. This storyline was a bit on the raunchy side. Cults, incest and kiddie porn are strife in this small town and Flowers will do whatever is needed to save the wee ones, and the cult members, from their terrible fates.
Profile Image for Sandi.
1,611 reviews46 followers
October 8, 2016
Though the crimes in this book were particularly unpleasant, Virgil is a great character and I always enjoy his investigative methods. As always with this series, the plot was compelling and the rural Minnesota setting well described. Listened to the audio version which was narrated by Eric Conger who has really improved since the first book and now adds to the experience.
Profile Image for Tim.
2,344 reviews274 followers
February 24, 2015
More superb writing, even when centered around a religious cult. 9 of 10 stars
Profile Image for Nancy.
1,580 reviews42 followers
December 12, 2016
Cults and incest...what more can I say? Despite the disturbing nature of the story and the excessive violence, it was a well written story.
Profile Image for Kathy Davie.
4,845 reviews720 followers
February 6, 2017
Fourth in the Virgil Flowers detective mystery thriller series and revolving around that effin' Flowers, lol. Bad Blood takes place in October in Minnesota.

In 2011, Bad Blood won the ITW Thriller Award for Best Hard Cover Novel. And I completely understand why. I'd give it a "7" if I could.

My Take
Holy cats! H-0-L-Y cats!! This one will have your jaw dropping below the floor! The drama and tension will keep your heart racing as well as your eyes and fingers as they turn pages as fast as possible. Sandford certainly trips you up as he slowly and quickly twists you around.

Yeah. That's what I said. Slowly and quickly. Slowly you find out why Bobby killed that farmer. Quickly you begin to suspect the overall crimes within Bad Blood. It could take a strong stomach to get through this.

I finally figured out why everyone calls him that fuckin' Flowers is because he's too good at what he does. Virgil says it's just "cop alliteration". He does make a good point about that early suicide in the story. Never really thought about how a guy might, um, present himself in such a situation, but it does make sense. Then again, Lee Coakley sure appreciates him, lol. Virgil, that is.

Virgil does have an unexpected way of investigating murder. He likes to blab all about their leads, to see what might happen. And his background as a preacher's son comes in right handy in this.

In some ways, I can understand why the Catholic Church was so upset when Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press. Ya let anybody read the Bible, interpret it the way they want, and it can become a nightmare.
"I'll tell you what, Emmet, reading the Bible for the … parts is not really reading the Bible."
Perverts will use any excuse…

I can't believe these religious idiots, how quickly they leap to blame others. I understand why, but it still astonishes me. I did have to laugh about the "minor pie fight" over why the World of Spirit kids scored at the top of academic achievements. Yep, you got it. Everyone decided the other kids in Minnesota would score just as well if teachers got paid more, lol.

The Story
One late fall Sunday in southern Minnesota, a farmer brings a load of soybeans to a local grain elevator — and a young man hits him on the head with a steel bar, drops him into the grain bin, waits until he's sure he's dead, and then calls the sheriff to report the "accident".

Suspicious, the sheriff calls in Virgil Flowers, who quickly breaks the kid down...and the next day the boy's found hanging in his cell. Remorse?

Virgil isn't so sure, and as he investigates he begins to uncover a multigeneration, multifamily conspiracy — a series of crimes of such monstrosity that, though he's seen an awful lot in his life, even he has difficulty in comprehending it...and in figuring out what to do next.

The Characters
Agent Virgil Flowers, a preacher's son, works as a detective-at-large (but doesn't carry a gun) for the BCA. His true love, however, is writing articles on hunting and fishing. Mrs. Wilson is Virgil's neighbor.

The Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) is…
…is a state police organization. Lucas Davenport is Virgil's boss. Beatrice Sawyer, Don Baldwin, and Mary Lopez are the scene-of-crime investigators. The hippie-ish Sandy is an excellent researcher. Rose Marie Roux is the commissioner of public safety and Lucas' boss. Shrake and Jenkins are BCA thugs.
"I've never been overgunned. I have been undergunned. After that happened, I reconceptualized."
Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation
Agent Bell Wood and Mitch Ingle worked the Kelly Baker murder. Janice.

Warren County
Homestead is its county seat with Dennis Brown as its chief of police and Lee's former boss. The Yellow Dog Café where Virgil spends a lot of time is owned by Bill Jacoby. Earl and Dick Street are some of the customers at the diner. Pat Sullivan is a gay reporter. Clare Kreuger delivers the mail. Rich is a photo technician with a tip. Brian and Judy Craig are farmers with some interesting insight. Peter Van Mann is a widower farmer who got reamed; Jake is his dog. Son Wood owns Son Wood's Surface Sealers and was a friend of Crocker's. Roger works for him. Delores is Son's chatty bookkeeper.

The nineteen-year-old football jock, Bob Tripp, works at the Battenberg Farmer's Co-op. George and Irma Tripp are his parents. Maicy is a student. Jay Wenner was a friend of Bobby's.

Sheriff's Department
The divorced Lee Coakley is the new sheriff in town and has three kids. (Sue is one of the boys' girlfriend.) Ike Patras is the medical examiner in Mankato. Deputies Gene Schickel and Gregg Dunn will back up Virgil and Lee. More deputies include John Kraus, Buddy, Marcia Wright, Rob, Don, Sherry, and Bob Hart. Stupek. Deputy Jimmy Crocker was on duty the night of the suicide; he was also a childhood friend of Flood's. Harlan is the previous sheriff.

Bill Clinton and Andersson are highway patrolmen. Sheriff Beau Harrison in Martin County will need to lend jail space. Larry Cortt is a friend of Hart and his wife, Jenny. Darrell Martin is Lee's private attorney. Judge John O'Hare is tight-lipped; Doris is his wife. Harris Toms is the county attorney.

The World of Spirit is…
…a religion brought from Germany back in the 1900s. Leonard and Louise Baker were Kelly's parents. John and Luanne Baker were her uncle and aunt. Jacob "Liberty" Flood is married to Alma. Edna and Helen are their precocious daughters. Emmet Einstadt is Alma's father and the head of the World of Spirit. Leonard and Junior are his sons. Mary is Leonard's wife. Wally Rooney will be moving into the Floods' house. Kathleen Spooner is Crocker's ex-wife.

Harvey Loewe has his own secrets and a desperate need to run. Joe and Marsha Loewe are his parents. Greta and Karl Rouse are really into it, and Karl loves photography. Kristy Rouse is the helpful daughter. The Bochers, Steinfelds, Beckers, Muellers, John McGuire, Ted Morgan, and Loren are fellow worshippers. Dick and Mary Bosche and Dick and Sandy Waldt had slid right in. Jacky Shoen.

Lucy "Birdy" McCain Olms is one who got away. Roland "Rollo" Olms was her jerk of a husband. Birdy's family included her parents, Ed and Ruth; her brothers Robert and William; and, Louise McCain Gordon. Charlie Lane is a cop in Sleepy Eye. Gina Becker is an old friend of Louise's.

Good Shepherd Lutheran Church
The Reverend John Baumhauer is an old friend of Virgil's dad. Danny McCoy used to be the Catholic priest in Homestead.

Hayfield is…
…a town where Virgil worked a case some time back. Clay Holley wants to help out. Marie is Clay's girlfriend. The Johnsons, Pells, and Schooners are all retired neighbors who can't wait to help as well.

Nebraska State Patrol
Lieutenant Joe Murphy knows how to get to Lenore Mackey's house.

Tom Parker is a very good defense attorney. Laurie is his associate and connects the murders. Richard Reedy was a slick guy from Marshall, Virgil's hometown.

The World of Law is the real world.

The Cover and Title
The cover reminds me of an Old Master oil painting with that gorgeous and atmospheric landscape with its lone barn set back behind the field and surrounded by hills and trees. The painting covers not quite half of the cover's bottom while the author's name — in a dull gold and white against a black background — is embossed and taking up the top half with a tiny bit of series information banding the middle.

Oh, yeah, the title is definitely about Bad Blood in this community.
Profile Image for Diane.
677 reviews28 followers
March 10, 2022
4 solid stars!

A different twist, kind of. Take a bit of Waco and any other cult story and weave them into a mulitple murder mystery!

Overall a pretty good read.
Profile Image for Ethan.
791 reviews144 followers
July 1, 2013
A small Minnesota town is shocked when local high school football star, Bobby Tripp, is arrested for the brutal murder of farmer Jacob Flood. Immediately, this opening scene, in which we read the details of Tripp killing Flood, strays from John Sandford's usual practice of hiding the identity of the killer. Knowing Tripp's identity, I was certain that this would be a story that was much different from any of the previous installments in this series. Sure enough, Tripp is found the next day, dead in his jail cell from an apparent suicide. Upon further investigation, it is revealed that Tripp's death was involuntary which could mean only one thing. . . murder.

Enter Virgil Flowers. He probably better resembles an aging cowboy/rocker, but there is no denying his skill. Despite his unconventional appearance and behavior, he has become one of the best investigators working for the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension(BCA). He is called by the town's sheriff, Lee Coakely. Coakley is an attractive, recent divorcee with two sons. From their first encounter, there is palpable chemistry between her and Virgil. But there is no time for romantic excursions. It is soon revealed that the officer who was guarding Tripp's cell has also, apparently, committed suicide. As you can probably predict, his death is quickly determined to be a murder, as well.

As Virgil investigates, he comes across two possible directions at which to follow the case. The first involves the young Bobby Tripp. As a high school sports star, he was sure to get a large scholarship to continue playing ball at the college level. But an injury left him in his small town. Virgil's snooping reveals that Tripp may have been gay. Stuck in his small town and hiding the secret to his sexuality, it is possible that Jacob Flood threatened to reveal Tripp's secret, leading Tripp to kill him.

The other thread involves the dead officer's secretive church. Perhaps more reminiscent of a cult, the church is rumored to condone strange sex acts, including pairing underage children with older members. This thread reveals actions dating over 100 years into the towns history and possible connections to previous murders. With all of these issues comming to light, Virgil is thrust into some of the darkest crimes he has ever experienced.

This is kind of a change of pace for John Sandford's Virgil Flowers series. Yes, he continues to make Virgil one of the most entertaining and relatable characters in crime fiction, but he forces his lovable character into some of the darkest situations he's ever written about. Rape is never an easy topic, especially when it involves children, but Sandford's skills as a writer allow him to touch upon the subject with a delicate hand, while still advancing his fast paced mystery. This is the best Virgil Flowers novel to date, with a strong web of mystery that will keep you engrossed until the very last page.
Profile Image for Eric_W.
1,937 reviews408 followers
April 8, 2013
An excellent addition to the Virgil Flowers series, a series I prefer to the Lucas Davenport books which often devolve into psychobabble with Weather and Ellen.

The case begins with the baseball bat head-bashing murder of a local farmer delivering soybeans to the local mill. The killer is a well-liked football star and his actions puzzle the community, but not as much as the string of killings that follow. BCA detective Flowers is asked to help with the investigation by the local newly elected sheriff who fears her election at the expense of one of her deputies might compromise the investigation.

If you read the reviews on Amazon, the one-star comments seem to fall into a couple of groups: those who object to "bad" words and/or the subject matter (child abuse and its connection to a religious cult or it's just "pornography", a bizarre complaint indeed), and those who complain about the Kindle price (get a life folks, you don't have to buy the book.) In other words the one star reviews have little substance to them and can be safely ignored as trite.

Some of the dialogue, especially with the children of the cultish group, seemed forced and whether such a group could be as large as it was in a rural community without raising more than a few eyebrows is problematic. It's a good story. My quibbling minor complaint is that perhaps Sandford could have used the story to examine the ramifications of a mindset that teaches a belief system to children they believe to be good that is in direct opposition to normal societal values.

One line I really liked: "Nothing scares a shit-kicker like somebody shooting up his truck."
Profile Image for Corey Woodcock.
277 reviews46 followers
June 21, 2020
There’s nothing quite like that old-time religion, huh??

This one gets five stars, without a doubt. This was the second Sandford book I read a few years ago, and I still think it’s one of the greatest things he’s ever written. This and Winter Prey are masterpieces in this genre, and I believe this book will satisfy and shock even the most jaded of thriller readers.

It starts with a murder, as many Sandford books do, and it quickly turns into a daisy chain of murders stemming from the first one. It can be a tad confusing until you get the names straight, but I do not believe it takes anything away from it. As my boy Virgil starts digging deeper, we find a seedy, perverse and cultish underbelly that has been kicking around this region for a long, long time. Saying much more than this would edge on spoiler territory and I do not want to do that with this novel-it all needs to be experienced fresh.

This book is gross, shocking, perverse and even darkly humorous. Virgil is on fire here and it’s my favorite of the Flowers series. Highly recommended.

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