Karin Slaughter
Author of Pretty Girls: A Novel
About the Author
Karin Slaughter was born in Georgia on January 6, 1971. In 2001, she published her first novel, Blindsighted, which made the Dagger Award shortlist for Best Thriller Debut. She is the author of the Grant County series and the Will Trent series. Her stand-alone novels include Cop Town, Pretty Girls, show more and Pieces of Her. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Works by Karin Slaughter
Three Twisted Stories: Go Deep, Necessary Women, and Remmy Rothstein Toes the Line (2015) 35 copies, 3 reviews
Meet the Queen of Suspense, Karin Slaughter {promotional booklet with interview and short stories} (2005) 11 copies, 2 reviews
Karin Slaughter 6 Book Collection 8 copies
Will Trent: Books 5-7: A Karin Slaughter Thriller Collection Featuring Fallen, Criminal, and Unseen 7 copies, 4 reviews
Viimeinen leski 2 copies
Grant County Series 5 Books Collection Set By Karin Slaughter (Faint Cold Fear, Kisscut, Indelible, Faithless, Blindsighted) (2022) 2 copies
Qui siamo tutti colpevoli 2 copies
The Night Before She Died 1 copy
Tripych 1 copy
L'oro del baratro 1 copy
Capelli biondi occhi azzurri 1 copy
Ninguém Pode Saber 1 copy
Non fidarti di lui 1 copy
Will Trent Broke 1 copy
Триптих 1 copy
La mia vendetta 1 copy
Siksi valehtelimme 1 copy
Matchup 1 copy
DREH DICH NICHT UM 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Slaughter, Karin
- Other names
- Slotere, Karīna
- Birthdate
- 1971-01-06
- Gender
- female
- Occupations
- crime novelist
- Agent
- Victoria Sanders (Victoria Sanders and Associates)
- Short biography
- Karin Slaughter (born January 6, 1971) is an American crime writer. The author of eighteen novels, Slaughter has sold more than 35 million copies of her books, which have been published in 37 languages and have debuted at #1 in the United Kingdom, Germany, and The Netherlands. Her first novel, Blindsighted (2001), was published in 27 languages and made the Crime Writers' Association's Dagger Award shortlist for "Best Thriller Debut" of 2001. She is also the 2015 CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger winner for novel Cop Town. Her novel, Pieces of Her, was published in 2018. The novel will be adapted into a television series of the same name and it will be released on Netflix.
Slaughter is a library advocate and founded Save the Libraries, a non-profit organization that campaigns to support US public libraries. The Save the Libraries fund has provided over $300,000 to the DeKalb County Public Library in Atlanta, Georgia.
Characters from Slaughter's two main series, Grant County and Will Trent (Atlanta), were brought together in her novels Undone (2009), titled Genesis internationally, and Broken (2010). In these novels, Will Trent and Sara Linton work cases set in Atlanta and Grant County, respectively. - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Georgia, USA
- Places of residence
- Atlanta, Georgia, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- Georgia, USA
Members
Discussions
80s-90s YA series romance, snobby girl, blue collar guy, jobs in pizzeria in Name that Book (May 2013)
Reviews
Favorite Quotes:
Money. That was the real obstacle... She would never forget the look on Jeffrey’s face the first time he’d seen the balance in her trading account. Sara had actually heard the squeaking groan of his testicles retracting into his body. It had taken a hell of a lot of suction to get them back out again.
Sara had explained the science behind these mood changes. During the stages of pregnancy and breastfeeding and childhood, a woman’s brain was flooded with hormones that show more altered the gray matter in the regions involved in social processes, heightening the mother’s empathy and bonding them closely to their child. Which was a damn good thing, because if another human being treated you the way a toddler did—threw food in your face, questioned your every move, unraveled all of the aluminum foil off the roll, yelled at the silverware, made you clean shit off their ass, peed in your bed, peed in your car, peed on you while you were cleaning up their pee, demanded that you repeat everything at least sixteen times and then screeched at you for talking too much—then you would probably kill them.
Tinder was a no-go. The guys who didn’t look married looked like they should be chained to a bench outside of a courtroom. She’d tried Match.com but not one of the losers that she was even remotely attracted to could pass a background check. Which said more about the type of men Faith was attracted to than internet dating sites.
Her parenting skills fell somewhere between Charlotte’s Web and Lord of the Flies. Jeremy still teased her about the note she’d once left in his lunch box: The bread is stale. This is what happens when you don’t close the bag.
Don’t mess with the US Government. They won two wars and can print their own money.
Dash was a stupid man’s idea of how a smart man sounded.
My Review:
This book was gripping and all-consuming yet it took me twice as long to read, as I had to put it down, take deep breaths, and walk away from it now and then. Not because it was bad, but because it was diabolically brilliant and absorbing, I was sucked right into this complex and fiendish vortex and helplessly engrossed in the chaos. The plot was complex and skillfully crafted while the writing was ingeniously textured and scorched my brain matter while it squeezed my heart and lungs.
This contemptible and monstrous scenario could very well happen, which was intensely disturbing to me as it was heinously realistic. The ever-escalating and highly disturbing climate of arrogance, hate, manipulation, and perversion of information being generated from our current national embarrassments at the top does seem to be empowering the most twisted of the vile and disenfranchised. Karin Slaughter is devilishly clever and a masterful wordsmith. She scared me silly. show less
Money. That was the real obstacle... She would never forget the look on Jeffrey’s face the first time he’d seen the balance in her trading account. Sara had actually heard the squeaking groan of his testicles retracting into his body. It had taken a hell of a lot of suction to get them back out again.
Sara had explained the science behind these mood changes. During the stages of pregnancy and breastfeeding and childhood, a woman’s brain was flooded with hormones that show more altered the gray matter in the regions involved in social processes, heightening the mother’s empathy and bonding them closely to their child. Which was a damn good thing, because if another human being treated you the way a toddler did—threw food in your face, questioned your every move, unraveled all of the aluminum foil off the roll, yelled at the silverware, made you clean shit off their ass, peed in your bed, peed in your car, peed on you while you were cleaning up their pee, demanded that you repeat everything at least sixteen times and then screeched at you for talking too much—then you would probably kill them.
Tinder was a no-go. The guys who didn’t look married looked like they should be chained to a bench outside of a courtroom. She’d tried Match.com but not one of the losers that she was even remotely attracted to could pass a background check. Which said more about the type of men Faith was attracted to than internet dating sites.
Her parenting skills fell somewhere between Charlotte’s Web and Lord of the Flies. Jeremy still teased her about the note she’d once left in his lunch box: The bread is stale. This is what happens when you don’t close the bag.
Don’t mess with the US Government. They won two wars and can print their own money.
Dash was a stupid man’s idea of how a smart man sounded.
My Review:
This book was gripping and all-consuming yet it took me twice as long to read, as I had to put it down, take deep breaths, and walk away from it now and then. Not because it was bad, but because it was diabolically brilliant and absorbing, I was sucked right into this complex and fiendish vortex and helplessly engrossed in the chaos. The plot was complex and skillfully crafted while the writing was ingeniously textured and scorched my brain matter while it squeezed my heart and lungs.
This contemptible and monstrous scenario could very well happen, which was intensely disturbing to me as it was heinously realistic. The ever-escalating and highly disturbing climate of arrogance, hate, manipulation, and perversion of information being generated from our current national embarrassments at the top does seem to be empowering the most twisted of the vile and disenfranchised. Karin Slaughter is devilishly clever and a masterful wordsmith. She scared me silly. show less
After close to two decades of estrangement, sisters Claire Scott and Lydia Delgado are brought together following the brutal murder of Claire’s husband, Paul. Their family had been shaken to the core years earlier when the oldest sister, Julia, disappeared from her college dorm. Worry and unanswered questions hang over the family like a dark rain cloud and each has been touched by the fallout.
When Claire makes an unsettling discovery about her husband, she ultimately calls into question show more everything she ever thought she knew about her sisters, her father’s suicide, her husband, and herself. As she digs deeper into Paul’s life, she discovers that nothing is as she believed it to be, and nothing will ever be the same again.
As characters, both sisters are flawed. Claire is particularly unlikable; she has abdicated from any hint of responsibility and simply allowed her husband to take charge of things. Despite her own infidelity, she embraces a holier-than-thou attitude which, when coupled with constant reminders of her beauty, does little to endear her to readers. Younger sister, Lydia, has, through hard work and grit, redeemed her life from its earlier dependence on drugs, but she is filled with resentment and anger. The third narrator, the girls’ father, Sam, died several years earlier, apparently a suicide, and speaks only through letters he had written to his oldest daughter after she disappeared.
The story is at its best when it is focused on the family, on the reactions and the coping mechanisms each member embraces following the disappearance of the oldest daughter. The writing is first-rate; rich detail and depth abound. The tension builds, the story unfolds in ever-increasing urgency and angst. The father’s letters to his missing daughter bring to the narrative a poignancy that borders on heartrending.
And yet, there is an overabundance of escalating graphic depravity spilling across page after page. Focused on all manner of evil perpetrated against women, it is difficult to read, sickening to the spirit, and detestable to the soul.
Yes, suspense thrillers are often about unspeakable acts and the malevolence of those who commit them. But the books that resound with readers tend to balance the “good” and the “evil” in such a way that, in the end, the reader finds that justice has been served and that satisfaction in some way mitigates the violence.
By blurring those lines, “Pretty Girls” tumbles into a disturbing, dark degeneracy. When Sam tells Claudia, “There are some things you can’t unsee,” he might well be warning readers that there are also some things you can’t unread. And, with its surfeit of harrowing horror, many readers are likely to wish they could unread this one. show less
When Claire makes an unsettling discovery about her husband, she ultimately calls into question show more everything she ever thought she knew about her sisters, her father’s suicide, her husband, and herself. As she digs deeper into Paul’s life, she discovers that nothing is as she believed it to be, and nothing will ever be the same again.
As characters, both sisters are flawed. Claire is particularly unlikable; she has abdicated from any hint of responsibility and simply allowed her husband to take charge of things. Despite her own infidelity, she embraces a holier-than-thou attitude which, when coupled with constant reminders of her beauty, does little to endear her to readers. Younger sister, Lydia, has, through hard work and grit, redeemed her life from its earlier dependence on drugs, but she is filled with resentment and anger. The third narrator, the girls’ father, Sam, died several years earlier, apparently a suicide, and speaks only through letters he had written to his oldest daughter after she disappeared.
The story is at its best when it is focused on the family, on the reactions and the coping mechanisms each member embraces following the disappearance of the oldest daughter. The writing is first-rate; rich detail and depth abound. The tension builds, the story unfolds in ever-increasing urgency and angst. The father’s letters to his missing daughter bring to the narrative a poignancy that borders on heartrending.
And yet, there is an overabundance of escalating graphic depravity spilling across page after page. Focused on all manner of evil perpetrated against women, it is difficult to read, sickening to the spirit, and detestable to the soul.
Yes, suspense thrillers are often about unspeakable acts and the malevolence of those who commit them. But the books that resound with readers tend to balance the “good” and the “evil” in such a way that, in the end, the reader finds that justice has been served and that satisfaction in some way mitigates the violence.
By blurring those lines, “Pretty Girls” tumbles into a disturbing, dark degeneracy. When Sam tells Claudia, “There are some things you can’t unsee,” he might well be warning readers that there are also some things you can’t unread. And, with its surfeit of harrowing horror, many readers are likely to wish they could unread this one. show less
This story, part of the Will Trent/Sara Linton series, begins in 1974 Atlanta, and alternates between that time period and the present. In 1974 we meet young Amanda Wagner, as well as young Evelyn Mitchell, Faith's mother and the focus of the last book of the series, Fallen. Georgia Bureau of Investigation agent, Will Trent, is ordered not to investigate the disappearance of a female college student, which only tends to pique his curiosity more. He learns that his immediate supervisor, show more Amanda Wagner, has been withholding information from him. His father, a convicted killer, was released from prison two months ago. Will has only seen pictures of his father, his trial taking place when Will was only a child. But as disturbed as he is knowing his father is out of prison, he's more alarmed by the apparent similarities between the missing students and the women his father killed.
I loved this book and it was one of my favorites. That being said, I don't recommend anyone read it who is not already familiar with these characters. The very in-depth back story of Amanda and Evelyn is probably of more interest to long time fans who already know Amanda. The author has devoted a great deal of time to filling in the blank spots of the main character. I was also filled with nothing but sympathy for the pioneering women of the 1970s who tried to break into jobs formerly held only by men. As a woman of the same generation who did something similar, I almost wept remembering some of that treatment.
I've recently been rereading the Will Trent/Sara Linton series in audio and think the books keep getting better and better. I had to laugh at some of the incidents in this book, especially during the 1974 parts. There is a lot of violence in this book, especially toward the women who are killed, but I think the author does a great job of making you sympathetic to the main characters. She knows how to construct a good crime story filled with characters who are flawed and damaged, as well as evil. I'm looking forward to the next book of the series, Unseen. show less
I loved this book and it was one of my favorites. That being said, I don't recommend anyone read it who is not already familiar with these characters. The very in-depth back story of Amanda and Evelyn is probably of more interest to long time fans who already know Amanda. The author has devoted a great deal of time to filling in the blank spots of the main character. I was also filled with nothing but sympathy for the pioneering women of the 1970s who tried to break into jobs formerly held only by men. As a woman of the same generation who did something similar, I almost wept remembering some of that treatment.
I've recently been rereading the Will Trent/Sara Linton series in audio and think the books keep getting better and better. I had to laugh at some of the incidents in this book, especially during the 1974 parts. There is a lot of violence in this book, especially toward the women who are killed, but I think the author does a great job of making you sympathetic to the main characters. She knows how to construct a good crime story filled with characters who are flawed and damaged, as well as evil. I'm looking forward to the next book of the series, Unseen. show less
Girl, Forgotten by Karin Slaughter is a very highly recommended, exceptional procedural and thriller. THIS is how it's done! Girl, Forgotten may be a sequel to Pieces of Her, but it will certainly work as a stand-alone as the back story is provided. Truly an un-put-down-able novel and one of the best of the year. Slaughter remains at the top of the list for excellent, dependable and reliable go-to authors.
Andrea Oliver is now a US Marshall. She has been assigned a position to join Marshall show more Leonard (Catfish) Bible in Longbill Beach, Delaware, to protect federal judge Esther Vaughn who has received a series of threatening letters. Since this is also the hometown of Andrea’s psychopathic father, Clayton Morrow who is now up for parole, what she is also doing is looking into the 1982 story of the judge's daughter, 18-year-old Emily Vaughn and her clique of 'friends', Clay, Blake, Nardo and Ricky. Clayton has always been a suspect in the murder of Emily and if she can prove Clayton is guilty, Andrea can keep him in prison. But Marshall Bible has his own private agenda and is looking into a series of suicides that have occurred in the area.
The narrative moves seamlessly back and forth between the story of what happened to Emily in 1981-1982 and Andrea's present day assignment and complicated multifaceted investigation which include the death threats to the judge, a near-by cult, and what really happened to Emily in the 80's. The investigations are eventually linked and interrelated. This is a novel focused on uncovering and exposing the truth, but it is also about a mother's love for her child.
The writing is absolutely pitch-perfect and extraordinary. The plot is intricate and full of tension. The characters are portrayed as complex, multidimensional, flawed and realistic individuals. Bible adds some humor as well as keen insight in the investigations. The investigation is unpredictable and multi-layered. There is a sharp contrast between societal expectation and norms in 1981 versus 2022. Having lived as an adult in both decades, it rings true, although Slaughter's 1981 feels harsher than it was in reality.
Another excellent novel from Karin Slaughter!
http://www.shetreadssoftly.com/2022/08/girl-forgotten.html show less
Andrea Oliver is now a US Marshall. She has been assigned a position to join Marshall show more Leonard (Catfish) Bible in Longbill Beach, Delaware, to protect federal judge Esther Vaughn who has received a series of threatening letters. Since this is also the hometown of Andrea’s psychopathic father, Clayton Morrow who is now up for parole, what she is also doing is looking into the 1982 story of the judge's daughter, 18-year-old Emily Vaughn and her clique of 'friends', Clay, Blake, Nardo and Ricky. Clayton has always been a suspect in the murder of Emily and if she can prove Clayton is guilty, Andrea can keep him in prison. But Marshall Bible has his own private agenda and is looking into a series of suicides that have occurred in the area.
The narrative moves seamlessly back and forth between the story of what happened to Emily in 1981-1982 and Andrea's present day assignment and complicated multifaceted investigation which include the death threats to the judge, a near-by cult, and what really happened to Emily in the 80's. The investigations are eventually linked and interrelated. This is a novel focused on uncovering and exposing the truth, but it is also about a mother's love for her child.
The writing is absolutely pitch-perfect and extraordinary. The plot is intricate and full of tension. The characters are portrayed as complex, multidimensional, flawed and realistic individuals. Bible adds some humor as well as keen insight in the investigations. The investigation is unpredictable and multi-layered. There is a sharp contrast between societal expectation and norms in 1981 versus 2022. Having lived as an adult in both decades, it rings true, although Slaughter's 1981 feels harsher than it was in reality.
Another excellent novel from Karin Slaughter!
http://www.shetreadssoftly.com/2022/08/girl-forgotten.html show less
Lists
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FAB 2020 (1)
Guilty Pleasures (1)
FAB 2023 (1)
To Read (1)
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Everand 2023 (5)
READ 2025 (5)
StoryTel 2024 (5)
READ IN 2022 (3)
READ IN 2021 (3)
READ IN 2020 (2)
StoryTel 2023 (2)
Female Author (1)
FAB 2025 (2)
FAB 2024 (2)
Secret Histories (1)
FAB 2022 (1)
FAB 2021 (1)
Awards
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Statistics
- Works
- 104
- Also by
- 10
- Members
- 59,154
- Popularity
- #245
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 2,074
- ISBNs
- 1,932
- Languages
- 29
- Favorited
- 146



















































