Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Search - Brain Drain (Destroyer, Bk 22)

Brain Drain (Destroyer, Bk 22)
Brain Drain - Destroyer, Bk 22
Author: Richard Sapir, Warren Murphy
Artists, composers, and writers are being mutilated and destroyed in the bloodiest murders in police history. This maniac is taking one thing - their brains! The chief of CURE nearly ends up as the next corpse... Remo and Chiun are acting fast, and discovering the killer's an old enemy, stockpiling brains to extract the creativity he's lacking. ...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780523008059
ISBN-10: 0523008058
Publication Date: 1976
Pages: 180
Edition: 1st
Rating:
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
 6

3.9 stars, based on 6 ratings
Publisher: Pinnacle
Book Type: Paperback
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review
Read All 1 Book Reviews of "Brain Drain Destroyer Bk 22"

Please Log in to Rate these Book Reviews

reviewed Brain Drain (Destroyer, Bk 22) on + 190 more book reviews
From the back of the book:

A Creativity Gap??

Someone or something is killing artists, poets, composers, and authors. They are being horribly murdered and mutilated. The police are totally baffled.

A maniac is on the loose, and has some warped reason for preying on these unsuspecting artists. The demented killer, in his gruesome pattern, not only murders his victims, but opens their skulls to remove their brains!

Remo and Chiun get into the act when CURE's director, Dr. Smith, is nearly killed when a piece of contemporary artwork explodes in a public park. Smith's injuried lead to a wild confrontation with a madman who is convinced he can control creativity and discover the very secrets of creative thought. By collecting brains.

The trail quickly leads to Hollywood, a center of creativity and communication. And, as they say, all you need is a good agent.

This agent turns out to be the sexiest and most powerful agent in town...and with brains yet.

Not even Hollywood's most brilliant storytellers could imagine what happens next. But Remo does. And Chiun figures it's a way to straighten out daytime television too.

The Destroyer.


Genres: