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Pendergast by Douglas Preston & Lincoln Child


It’s hard to believe that I was first introduced to the enigmatic Agent Aloysius X. L. Pendergast back in 1995 with the release of Relic. That novel was phenomenal—intelligent, atmospheric, and chilling in all the right ways - and I instantly began reading every book by the authors and waited expectantly for each new release. Life, as it tends to do, intervened, and I eventually fell behind.

So when I discovered they had written an origin story for one of my all-time favorite characters, I was beyond thrilled.

Pendergast takes us back to the very beginning.

The novel opens with Special Agent Dwight Chambers at his lowest point. In six devastating months, he has lost both his partner and his wife. Returning to work in the New Orleans Field Office, grief-stricken and unmoored, he is assigned to mentor a peculiar new recruit: A.X.L. Pendergast.

From the start, the dynamic between Chambers and the young Pendergast is electric. Chambers is grounded, wounded, and practical. Pendergast is brilliant, aloof, unorthodox—and more than a little infuriating. When Pendergast pulls an outrageous stunt that lands them both suspended, what could have been a career-ending disaster becomes the catalyst for something far darker.

Freed from bureaucracy, Pendergast seizes the opportunity to investigate a strange murder in Mississippi. What begins as a seemingly whimsical side quest spirals into a horrifying series of ritualistic killings that defy profiling and logic. The tension escalates masterfully. Preston and Child excel at blending procedural investigation with creeping dread, and this story is no exception.

But what truly makes this novel shine is seeing the foundation of the Pendergast we know and love. His brilliance. His theatricality. His unsettling calm. His razor-sharp intellect paired with methods that skirt the edge of insubordination. Watching him in his formative years adds depth to the legend.

And just when you think the case is solved—when justice appears served—the true horror begins.

That final shift is classic Preston & Child: layered, unexpected, and deeply unsettling.

If by some odd reason you haven’t had the pleasure of reading any of these books, start here. Pendergast is a perfect entry point. Then head immediately to Relic. You will not be disappointed.

For longtime fans, this origin story feels like coming home.
For new readers, it’s the beginning of an obsession.

A definite recommend.

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