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Less than Dead (Bug Man Series #4)

Less than Dead (Bug Man Series #4)
Author: Tim Downs
Publisher: Thomas Nelson
Category: Book

List Price: $22.99
Buy New: $9.99
You Save: $13.00 (57%)



New (31) Used (7) from $9.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 9 reviews
Sales Rank: 78190

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 352
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3
Dimensions (in): 9.4 x 6.4 x 1.3

ISBN: 1595543074
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6
EAN: 9781595543073
ASIN: 1595543074

Publication Date: September 9, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Kindle Edition - Less than Dead (Bug Man Series #4)

Similar Items:

  • First the Dead (Bug Man Series #3)
  • Chop Shop (Bug Man Series #2)
  • Shoofly Pie (Bug Man Series #1)
  • Head Game
  • Plague Maker

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

Some secrets just won't stay buried.

When strange bones surface on a U.S. senator's property, the FBI enlists forensic entomologist Nick Polchak to investigate the forgotten graveyard. Polchak's orders are simple: figure out the mess.

But Polchak, known as the "Bug Man" because of his knowledge of insects and their interaction with the dead, senses darker secrets buried beneath the soil.

Secrets that could derail the senator's presidential bid.

Secrets buried in the history of a quaint Virginia town.

Secrets someone is willing to kill to protect.

With the help of a mysterious local woman named Alena and her uncanny cadaver dogs, Polchak sets out to dig up the truth.

But with a desperate killer hot on his trail, he'll be lucky to wind up anything less than dead.




Customer Reviews:   Read 4 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Less Than Dead by Tim Downs   November 7, 2008
Less than Dead is an awesome story, and I love the humor Tim Downs puts in all his books. My favorite character is Nick Polchak, and I hope he comes out with many more Bug Man books.


5 out of 5 stars Best of the four   October 29, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

So far I have laughed out loud at the original writing of Tim Downs. It seems to start off as the best of the four in the series so far.


5 out of 5 stars 4th in Forensics Procedural series a stellar effort!   October 23, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful


Less Than Dead by Tim Downs is the fourth book in the Bug Man series about entomologist Nick Polchak. Nick is quirky and sarcastic, with a fierce intelligence and drive to find the truth about crimes. He's called in to investigate the discovery of several bodies buried in graves (on top of old graves) by a possible serial killer in Virginia. The land belongs to the man who must may become the next President of the United States, and there are far more forces at work than Nick is prepared to deal with, including a young woman known as a witch who talks to animals and raises the dead. Despite the paranormal sounding teaser, this solid forensics procedural is grounded in reality and full of smarts. Nick is an absolutely delightful protagonist. He's sarcastic, refuses to be swayed by power, and comes up with all of the comebacks the rest of us just dream about. He also has a solid vein of goodness deep inside that forces him to ask the questions no one else wants the answers to. Downs has an amazing talent for dialogue. Every exchange zings across the page making the story zip. There are so many books in this genre, but this one is truly too good to pass up. I can't wait to read the rest of the series to get to know Nick better.



5 out of 5 stars The best Tim Downs book yet!   October 19, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

She's an outcast. The townsfolk of backwoods Endor, Virginia call her a witch. Rumor has it she spends her nights roaming the woods with a three-legged dog searching for the remains of her missing father. Her name is Alena, and the children of Endor say she visits the local animal shelter looking for plump puppies to take home so she can drink their blood. Not exactly a gal you'd want to make friends with, right? She is if you're Nick Polchak, aka "The Bugman". He needs a cadaver search dog yesterday, and if Alena's hound is as good as Nick thinks, he'll do anything to get on Alena's good side. Even if it means risking life and limb.

Nick's been hired by FBI Special Agent Nick Donovan (from Downs' novel Plague Maker) to help solve the mystery of an ancient graveyard a back hoe accidentally uncovered on Senator John Henry Braden's property. This isn't just any cemetary. There are two bodies in each grave. One in a casket, the other buried on top. The workings of a serial killer? The FBI doesn't know for sure, and neither does Nick. All he knows is that he can't start his work until all possible graves in the area are identified by a cadaver dog, and the one the FBI hired is running in circles.

Nick Polchak isn't your typical fictional hero. He isn't strong, handsome or social. More like Monk than Jack Bauer. But there's something endearing about this crazy, insect loving man with the enormous coke bottle glasses, wickedly dry sense of humor, and disdain for authority. He says the things we wish we could say, and we never know what hornet's nest he'll step on. We don't delve much into Nick's personal life this time (read Chop Shop if you want to know more about his past). He's basically dropped into this story fully developed, but he's such a quirky character that you get to know him quickly.

Nick is originally called on the graveyard case for his entomology expertise, but it's the cadaver dog aspect which gives us the signature gross out moments, as well as our education. Typical of a Downs novel, we come away armed with some cool facts. Like how a dog can have two hundred million olfactory cells in its nose compared to about five million in humans. Says Alena to Nick at one point, "You walk into a kitchen and smell beef stew; a dog walks into a kitchen and smells beef, carrots, peas, potatoes--it's called `odor layering'. He can even smell the salt--even in a dilution of one in ten million."

Maybe it's because Tim Downs has grown in his three prior Bugman novels (Shoofly Pie, Chop Shop & First The Dead), but the dead-pan humor in Less Than Dead is what sets it above the others. Nick's response to the above stew? "Question," Nick said. "If a dog's sense of smell is so much more sensitive than a man's, how come a dog will stick its nose in your crotch?"

During an interview I did with Tim awhile back I asked him what he'd love to write someday but hadn't yet. He answered: "A pure comedy--and I hope to get to do one fairly soon. I suppose it's a leftover from my comic strip days [he wrote and illustrated the now defunct strip Downstown]: I just love humor, and I'd love to write a book where the humor is more up front."

Mixing humor and suspense can be risky and hard to pull off. If you come off too zany it's hard to take the plot seriously. Jokes in the wrong character's mouths or at the wrong time can end up sounding forced, like the author knew things were getting too intense and tried to lighten things up. But with a character like Nick it all works. The straight-faced banter is usually at its finest between Nick and his female supporting characters (think Dr. Beth Woodbridge from First the Dead), and that's certainly true here with Nick and Alena.

There's a lot going on in Less Than Dead, and the subplot involving the Senator and his wife might seem tedious at first. But everything makes sense as you keep reading. The plot is intricate and comes together without any of the rushed-ending-feel of some thrillers. (You know the type--it's obvious the author was on deadline and had to wrap things up in a hurry.) We get to relish in the conclusion, and it's a satisfying one. A few scenes might be difficult reading for sensitive animal lovers, but this dogphile was able to get through.

Since Shoofly Pie the Bugman novels have progressively developed to become some of the best suspense reading on the market. Less than Dead is the best of the bunch.

--Reviewed by C.J. Darlington for TitleTrakk



5 out of 5 stars Bug Man Meets Dog Lovin' Lady, Sparks Fly   October 18, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Tim Downs doesn't disappoint. I complained last night that I may never finish the book b/c I was laughing at nearly every line. Despite that, I did finish and it's one of those books, I'd actually read again.

Nick is sarcastic as ever, but don't think that that detracts from the other characters in the book. Special Agent Nathan Donovan is back for a semi-meaty cameo. Alena Savard and her reclusive ways are intriguing.

Part of what makes this book excellent is the dialogue and part is the characterization and yet another part is the intricate plot that twists, turns and still thrills. Definitely a worthwhile read. If you're not a Tim Downs fan yet, you will be.


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