Red 1-2-3 by John Katzenbach
 Friday, February 21, 2014 at 8:13AM
Friday, February 21, 2014 at 8:13AM 
Published by Mysterious Press on January 7, 2014
Red 1-2-3 is built on a clever premise. An undistinguished writer of  crime fiction who happens to be a serial killer decides to write an  instruction manual for serial killers. He has selected three redheads as  victims to illustrate his methods. He intends to commit and memorialize  the perfect crime because, well, he's getting old and feels the need  for a legacy. By killing three women within hours of each other, each in  a different way and after warning them of their fate, the writer  believes he will take his place in the annals of serial killer history  and launch his book to bestseller status.
Each Red receives a  letter in the mail that begins with the opening of Little Red Riding  Hood and ends with "You have been selected to die." One Red is a lonely  doctor who performs remarkably unfunny standup comedy routines as a  hobby. One is a former teacher and current lush whose husband and  daughter died in an accident. The third is an angry high school student.  They could form a support group for distressed redheads (which is sort  of what they do). The would-be killer, of course, is the Big Bad Wolf.  His wife, who is blissfully ignorant of her husband's hobby during most  of their marriage (or perhaps she's willfully stupid), is Mrs. Big Bad  Wolf.
John Katzenbach creates a strong psychological profile of  the killer, making him a more substantial character than any of the  Reds, who tend to be stereotypes. The sullen teenager is the most  competent of the three Reds, but her notion of how to deal with an  anonymous letter is an eye-roller. The simplest solution would be for  each intended victim to change her hair color, thus screwing up the  killer's theme and perhaps sending the killer in search of a new plan,  but that never occurs to them. They instead contrive a plan that only  the looniest residents of Thrillerworld would attempt. I guess going to  the police (only one of the three does so, and only once) would be less  interesting but it would certainly be more sensible than the plan the  Reds hatch. Fortunately, they aren't dealing with a killer or is  particularly energetic or even particularly bright. He is convinced that  the police will not connect the three killings as long as he commits  each murder in a different way. Even if he had not sent each Red a  threatening letter and You Tube video, would the police really not  connect the apparently unmotivated slayings of three redheads in the  same city at roughly the same time?
Unfortunately, this is a  thriller without many thrills. For most of the novel, the plot lacks  action and builds little tension. I spent quite a bit of my reading time  wondering when the killer would get out of his writing chair and  actually kill someone. You know the story is getting dull when you start  rooting for the killer just so something will happen. The ending is a  huge anti-climax. Despite Katzenbach's fluid writing and the novel's  interesting premise, the story didn't grab me. The fundamental problems  is that Katzenbach didn't make me care what happened to the redheads.  That's a serious interest-killer in a novel that pits intended victims  against a serial killer.
NOT RECOMMENDED