9780062302090
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Dear Killer audiobook

  • By: Katherine Ewell
  • Narrator: Heather Wilds
  • Length: 9 hours 14 minutes
  • Publisher: Katherine Tegen Books
  • Publish date: April 01, 2014
  • Language: English
  • (4397 ratings)
(4397 ratings)
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Dear Killer Audiobook Summary

Full of “can’t look away” moments, Dear Killer is a psychological thriller perfect for fans of gritty realistic fiction such as Dan Wells’s I Am Not a Serial Killer and Jay Asher’s Thirteen Reasons Why, as well as television’s Dexter.

Rule One–Nothing is right, nothing is wrong. Kit looks like your average seventeen-year-old high school student, but she has a secret–she’s London’s notorious “Perfect Killer.” She chooses who to murder based on letters left in a secret mailbox, and she’s good–no, perfect–at what she does.

Her moral nihilism–the fact that she doesn’t believe in right and wrong–makes being a serial killer a whole lot easier . . . until she breaks her own rules by befriending someone she’s supposed to murder, as well as the detective in charge of the Perfect Killer case.

As New York Times bestselling author of the Gone series Michael Grant says, Dear Killer is “shocking, mesmerizing, and very smart.”

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Dear Killer Audiobook Narrator

Heather Wilds is the narrator of Dear Killer audiobook that was written by Katherine Ewell

Katherine Ewell wrote Dear Killer when she was seventeen years old. She was one of fifty finalists out of 5,000 entries in the 2011 Amazon Breakthrough Novel Contest and has attended the invitational Iowa Young Writers' Studio. In addition, she has the distinction of being named a California Arts Scholar and has been awarded the California Governor's Medallion for artistically talented youth. Dear Killer is her first novel.

About the Author(s) of Dear Killer

Katherine Ewell is the author of Dear Killer

Dear Killer Full Details

Narrator Heather Wilds
Length 9 hours 14 minutes
Author Katherine Ewell
Publisher Katherine Tegen Books
Release date April 01, 2014
ISBN 9780062302090

Additional info

The publisher of the Dear Killer is Katherine Tegen Books. The imprint is Katherine Tegen Books. It is supplied by Katherine Tegen Books. The ISBN-13 is 9780062302090.

Global Availability

This book is only available in the United States.

Goodreads Reviews

Elle

September 07, 2017

Unpopular opinion review time! // WHY THIS BOOK IS GREAT♔ The thematics of this book are incredibly interesting. There's exploration of the eye-for-an-eye mentality and how it can drive people to their limits. Kit only kills people when she feels that they deserve it, but how can she know that someone deserves to die? There's also a great exploration of a ton of different moral issues. Kit's inner conflicts speak to nature vs. nurture, and it's very well executed. This book doesn't attempt to answer all the different questions it poses, and while that won't work for everyone, I found it thought-provoking. ♔ Kit's character is also quite interesting. She's been raised as a serial killer, so her moral compass is completely skewed. Her perceptions of the world, and her cut-off view of the world, make her interesting and dynamic. While she's not exactly sympathetic, she's so fun to hate that it's hard not to enjoy her narration. ♔ The plotting is incredibly well-done. This book is completely unputdownable and addicting. Suspense is drawn out just enough. // WHY THIS BOOK HAS SUCH A FUCKING LOW RATING♔ First of all, there's a hint of unneeded romance. Although the relationship never really devolves into romance, there's a clear undertone to it. It doesn't work at all for a book this brutal. However, Kit's development is tied more to her relationships with a new friend, which made this less relevant. ♔ Second of all, it overexaggerates police stupidity to drive plot. This seems to be the major problem other reviewers had, and I absolutely agree with this complaint. The thing is, the thematics of this book are SO INTERESTING that I found this flaw easy to ignore. If you can suspend disbelief a bit, this book is much, much better. VERDICT: Recommended to anyone who likes suspense and can deal with hateable narrators. Yes, it has a few flaws, but if you're willing to deal with them, Dear Killer is a really interesting and fast-paced read.

Charlotte

June 27, 2015

This review first appeared on: Thoughts and Pens.Dear Killer is not a book that would be enjoyed by everyone. I even have a feeling that a significant amount of readers will hate and burn it. For starters, the main character of this book is not someone that you can really call a “heroine.” Kit Ward is not the girl who will save the day. On the contrary, she’s the dragon who needs to be slain by your knight in shining armor. And the most disturbing thing is that she has a very disturbing view about morality.Kit’s first rule in life is: There’s no right or wrong. To her, such notions are based on perspective. Every time she murders someone, she remains cool and indifferent about it. She’s not even haunted by the memories of her victims because everything is just a job to her. But suddenly, things made a significant turn when she killed someone who isn’t a part of her job. She started questioning herself, her rules, her beliefs. She even went as far as going into a killing slump.Kit’s development as a character was really interesting to follow even if I couldn’t relate to her. I mean, how could I? I have never understood the workings of a killer’s mind. Though she got to a point where she almost regretted her actions as a murderer, she really didn’t work hard to redeem herself. The opposite actually happened. She got more determined to kill due to another crazy realization. At that point, I was already asking myself if I am as crazy as Kit because I wasn’t disgusted with the path that she chose in the end. And trust me, it was horrifying but it only fuelled my interest. I guess that I really had an open mind when I dove into Dear Killer. And there were times that I was able to put myself in Kit’s shoes enabling me to see things from her point of view.It’s not only Kit that caught my attention. Her relationship with her mother made a disturbing impact on me. Yes, Kit might be worthy of eternal condemnation but can we really blame her? Her killer mother raised her to believe that that there’s no right or wrong and that they could kill any person as long as the others deemed it. To whom would you lay the blame?With a philosophical vibe and definitely thought-provoking, Dear Killer is not without its faults. My enjoyment went a few notches down after identifying some glaring plotholes along the way. I am not a cop and I don’t have any idea how they investigate serial killings but this book really put the Scotland Yard police force in a very bad light. In here,they look like a bunch of incompetent idiots who never found any leads about Kit Ward when the evidences are as clear as daylight. And hurrah, you will also find that it is easy for a 16-year old turning 17 girl to befriend a cop-cum-detective. And to make matters more unbelievable, that 16 year old is allowed to go to crime scenes and her opinions are even sought out by the police. I could hardly suspend my disbelief.Luckily enough, the theme explored by the book was enough to keep me hooked until the end. Dear Killer does not draw its power from the grisly killings nor from the chilling thoughts of our MC. Disregarding the blood lust of Kit, she’s a very likable person and her thoughts are not that morbid to make you shiver. Dear Killer is more of a philosophical story than a thriller/mystery one. It plants seeds of doubts in your mind. It causes you to question your beliefs. It makes you wonder how laws came to be. And eventually, it will compel you to think deeply of morality.Overall, Dear Killer was a remarkable read with its rousing premise and realistic ending. It didn’t wow me but it’s the kind of story that will stay with you for the days to come. Highly recommended for those people who are fascinated with morality and for those who want to read a YA novel with zero romance. Yep, you’ve read that right.***An e-ARC of this book was freely provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review. Thanks, Harper Collins and Katherine Tegen Books!***

Paula

August 29, 2013

Have you ever picked up a book and just knew by reading the blurb and the title etc , that you would fall in love with it and it would be right up your alleyway ? For me, this was Dear Killer. I had, had this book sitting on my Amazon wishlist when I saw it come up as an Available ARC on Edelweiss Books and I then and there knew I had to request it . Dear Killer, was as perfect as I could have imagined it. It got me interested from the very first page as I wanted to know more about this seventeen-year old girl Kit who is the face behind the moniker "The Perfect Killer". How did a everyday girl fall into doing this ? What type of life does she live on a day to day basis ? It was amazing as you read the pages and the story unfolds . This is one book that I would say, that you should ideally read in one sitting or two-three if you have to as it flows from one day to the next. I leave with these parting words that if you are a fan of serial killers - the people themselves, the person behind the mask and wanting a book told from the killer's POV then Katherine Ewell's book "Dear Killer" is the story for you.

Caitlin

June 18, 2019

I zoomed through this one! Ewell's first-person perspective of a teenage serial killer was weirdly engaging. You find yourself rooting for Kit--sympathizing with her and hoping she doesn't get caught. The fact that Ewell can write this character with such ethos is a strength of her writing style. Kudos!

Tia

May 06, 2016

** spoiler alert ** My book review is over a book I read this semester. It’s all about this lady killer, she’s a professional killer. She’s following in her mother footsteps of being a killer. Her mother was the top notch killer, until she had a kid, and the thn she had to teach her daughter how to kill. She started really really young. At the ages between nine and twelve, she killed four people. Her job is to literally go around killing people. Her name is Kit. she plays her role as the London’s “Perfect Killer” seriously. She takes the killing, and getting the money deal completely like it’s a full time job (which it basically is to her.) She gets her money and letters for her next kill not like a game. She is 100% loyal to her job and the stuff she does, to her “master”, and her mother. Her mother is the reason Kit does all of this. Her mother was a killer, and she grew up Kit teaching her how to professional kill when she learned how to walk. Kit said on page 2, “I kill on order. I am everyone’s assassin. I belong to no one but the grim reaper herself.” Kit is a good person. She has friends, she has boyfriends, she has family. Kit is like a regular girl. That’s why no one would expect her to be a bad person. She is a perfect pick to be a killer. The writer's way of telling how Kit does her stuff and what Kit does, is so amazing. She puts it in perfect wording, format, text, etc etc etc. The author's name is Katherine Ewell. She’s written many many many more stories including love stories, to drama, to killing sprees (like this one.) I don’t really know how or why this book caught my eye. I was just walking in the library one and and I saw this book and the whole mindset of it was just like “whaaaaat.” I was so attracted to it, and I am definitely glad I picked it up. I feel like this book is such a tragic and adventurous books. It’s not one of those books that I feel like people would be like, “Ooh that book looks good. I’m going to get that.” I just feel like people would rather read The Maze Runner or The Hunger Games again and again and again before they decide to even look at new books. And some people might not like books like that, I get that, I just wish people gave it a chance because it is such an amazing book honestly. But back to the book. This kind of life is the only thing Kit knows. She grew up with her mother doing this, her grandma did it, now she does it. I feel like it would be hard for Kit to change if she ever even decided to not do this for a living anymore. What I’m confused about is that, does like the cops know about this stuff? Do people know it’s her? Will she ever get caught, and if she does, what will she get sued for? Is she going to go to jail for the rest of her life? I just wish I knew. Or I wish I could get a hold of the author to ask her all these questions I have, because I have so much, and MANY more. When Katherine Ewell was seventeen years old, she was one of the fifty finalists out of 5,000 entries in the 2011 Amazon Breakthrough Novel Contest and has attended the invitational Iowa Young Writers’ Studio. Kit never regrets and kill. And every time she kills someone, she leaves a symbol on their body, so whoever finds it, knows it’s the London’s Perfect Killer. Kit isn’t the kind of person to kill because she likes it or she loves it or enjoys it. She says, “I don’t crave death. I’ve heard of serial killers who love it, who live for the moment when their victims stops breathing, who thrive on it. I am not like that. I kill as a matter of habit and as a consequence of the way I was raised.” Meaning, she doesn’t kill because she enjoys it, she kills because that’s what she was grown up to do. So yeah, that was my book review over Dear Killer, by Katherine Ewell. An amazing author. I am so excited to read more and more of her books.

Jennifer

August 23, 2014

Dear Killer is Katherine Ewell's debut novel. It encompasses several genres to include young adult, suspense/thriller, mystery, and horror. Someone is leaving bodies around the city with “Dear Killer” letters attached and a full-force investigation is in process. But this story is told through the eyes of the murderer so it's not really a mystery for the reader. The lead character: Kit has been trained by her mother since childhood to kill. She doesn't know anything else. The mother has filled Kit's head with the philosophy that the world needs murderers-for-hire to set a moral balance. Laws and rules, right and wrong have been dictated by society and are not a true model of morality. Kit has never questioned this before, and her thought process combined with her training truly make her the "perfect killer”. People within the community write letters addressed to “Dear Killer” with a rationale why someone they know should die and she makes it happen. But something sparks a question in Kit's mind about her actions. Are the deaths she facilitates justified or is she just as evil, if not more so, than some of the victims? There are a few issues with the plot in this book but I still found it a very entertaining read. I was pretty shocked to learn that the author was only seventeen years old when she wrote it! My favorite thing about this book was the planning and acting out of the murders, as disturbing as they may be. I have an entire bookshelf devoted to women who kick serious butt and this book is on it. Although, most of the other books on this shelf have women kicking ass for good, not evil, but whatever. The thought of a seventeen-year-old serial killer who thinks she is doing the world a favor is truly horrific but I just couldn't help feeling so engaged in these sequences. Kit's POV increased in complexity as she started to really take a look at her actions and ponder the concept of good versus evil. This book has many mixed reviews, and I can see why some readers feel like the ending fell flat. But if you truly grasp the “moral” of this story, then it makes a lot of sense, and (view spoiler)[while this was never going to be a happily-ever-after, it did make me feel a sense of pride in our sweet but not-so-innocent Kit (hide spoiler)]. I give this book 3.5 stars, rounding up to 4 on goodreads. If you like any of the genres this book falls into (and you can look past a few plot holes) then give Dear Killer a try.My favorite quote:“In a way, losing hope and losing importance are the same thing. It is that youthful vibrance, that eternal longing and believing, that makes youth so important--if you grow old and lose that without finding another way to be important, you will slip away, fall into insignificance, like one sheet of paper. You may be useful, but you will never stand out from the crowd. You cannot look at a piece of paper and say, "I remember you." You never can.”

Ashleigh

May 15, 2018

Dear Killer follows Kit, your average teenage girl living in London with her parents. Nothing out of the ordinary. Well, apart from the fact she's an infamous serial killer who's been trained to kill people from the age of 9. Just your everyday teenage girl, am I right?You see, Kit is the infamous Perfect Killer, a serial killer who picks her targets based on letters left in a secret hole, from people who want others dead. After murdering her victims in a 'perfect way', she leaves no clues to who could have committed these deaths, other than the letter that led her to picking this victim. Kit is a sort of Angel of Death, raised by her mother, who was a serial killer before her, to murder people who 'deserve it'. At the beginning of the story, Kit befriends a girl at her school called Maggie, a girl who has recently become friendless after rejecting a boy in her friendship group. Maggie becomes her first ever friend and the two are soon inseparable. After her mother introduces her to the detective leading the investigation of the Perfect Killer case (Alex), she decides to keep her friends close, and her enemies closer. Just what is Kit up to? And how will her new friends influence her deadly actions?This story was kind of hard to get into, but let me tell you, when I was in, I was in! I loved the concept of a young girl being trained by her mother to be a serial killer, something which is unheard of, really. The turmoil that Kit faces throughout the story was interesting. If I'm honest, I was hoping for (view spoiler)[a romance of some sort between Kit and Alex (hide spoiler)]. I don't know why, it just felt that things were going that way. I did feel that Kit was stupid (view spoiler)[to insert herself into the investigation, and how the hell Alex didn't work out it was Kit much earlier than he actually did, is beyond me. The clues were there right from the beginning!! (hide spoiler)]

Sydney

February 16, 2021

This book was very interesting and kept me reading. I have seen reviews on the book saying it was horrible, and i get the concept of it because it is a 17 year old murdering people. But you have to understand that this book is fictional, and that none of this is real. Otherwise, it kept me interested the whole time and i would recommend it for anyone who likes any kind of murder mystery series.

Stormy

May 05, 2015

Thought this one sounded interesting but it blew me away! I'm just speechless & my head is spinning. Lots of depth about humanity & evil & morality that I did not expect. Such a hard, hard read & not sure if my weak stomach will ever be able to read it again, but WOW.

Tracey

June 28, 2014

My name is Kit, but most people know me as the Perfect Killer.I kill on order. I am everyone's assassin. I belong to no one but the grim reaper herself. Before I was a reader of YA, I was a huge true crime fan. I loved trying to get inside the mind of the criminal and seeing what made them tick. What made them different to you and me. Was it an evil that they were born with or was it something that developed over time due to circumstance? The whole nature verses nurture debate. When I saw the synopsis for Dear Killer, I was immediately drawn to it. This sounded right up my alley. I will firstly say that I enjoyed this book. I enjoyed it a great deal actually. But there were also aspects that I didn't like at all. And having read it some weeks back now, I've had time to reflect a little bit more and hopefully get across more accurately my thoughts on the book. And I felt like laughing.Because I was the queen of it all, a queen looking out over her kingdom, because they were all bent to my will and marched to the beat of my murderous drum. And of course they didn't know it, but I knew it, and that was what mattered. Kit is the perfect killer. Or so she tells us, constantly. She commits cold blooded murder while telling herself that she is justified because the people that she is killing have done wrong to someone, somewhere. She shows no remorse, because she feels none. She is cold and calculated. Kit is a character that doesn't make you feel all warm and fuzzy. In fact you will more than likely despise her. I know I did for the most part. She thinks highly enough of herself to make up for that though. Her logic is skewed so badly. Her reasons for killing were not what I expected. The people that she is killing are not evil people who have committed heinous acts. She kills them for the most basic and flimsy of reasons. Barely batting an eyelid when she's done.Another aspect of the story that bugged me was the drop off point for the letters. How is it that everyone in all of London knew where this place was, except for the police? The police with the investigators and resources to find out such facts. The police who have been delving into the case for such a long period of time. I really struggled with this aspect throughout the whole story. It got on my nerves that the police were portrayed as so completely inept.Another issue that I had was Kit's friendship with the officer in charge of the investigation. The age difference between them made me question what basis the friendship had, I mean, she's still in school, not to mention that Kit wasn't the greatest at keeping her mouth shut in regards to the murders. And yet, he suspects nothing! She left clues, left, right and centre, but still he put his trust in her. He defended her and believed in her. The paradise of death, that crushing slicing burning sensationThat beautiful sensationI'm lost and I don't mind because I am so aliveBecause I am a murderer Despite all the previously discussed issues I had with Dear Killer, and my dislike of Kit, I have to say that I did enjoy it. It was original and very different to most other Young Adult reads that you're likely to pick up. The writing was good and I was hooked by the story right from the very start. I'm not sure though, if my investment was due to my need to find something redeemable in Kit or not. And while nothing ever eventuated, I still enjoyed the time that I spent reading it. Do you remember what I said about not enjoying murder? That was a lie. 3.5/5 Cold Kit Stars.Copy received from the publisher via Edelweiss.

Aliam

April 28, 2015

** spoiler alert ** I don't know what to say. Wait, let me breath first. Yeah, inhale, exhale. Okay. So this book.. Is nothing like what I have read so far, maybe because it was the very first book I ever bought which is about murders. I don't know. I can't say I didn't liked it. I did, really. Was that bad? I'm looking for words to say to this book. It's not bad. While reading, there are times when I hope Kit won't get caught, wait, really, there are no times where I hope she gets caught. I mean, its just that, I know her. I mean, I know what she's thinking. I was excited while reading through Chapter 8. The one where she punched Michael hard. And then the threats. She was protecting Maggie, I don't care about what reason. And then they became best of friends. I know she loved her, cared for her. If not, she wouldn't have asked those things to Maggie. And then there's Alex, oh, her Alex. It was just too much for her, maybe? Only at the last chapters did I thought that maybe she needed to be caught so she could stop the madness of Diana. And in the end it was kind of like love that stopped her, right? What she feels for Alex. I was thinking it she's going to kill him or not. But boy, was it a cliffhanger. I wish it didn't end like that! I wish there were few more pages after that last words she said! I wanted to know what happened next. To her Mom. To Alex. To Kit. I just wished there was more. But aside from the ending, I think that the book was really good, considering it was my first ever book of the said genre.

Kangkhita

October 26, 2015

"Dear Killer" is a book about a 17-year-old girl named Kit who is a killer/murderer. She has a mailbox in a very old bathroom in a cafe where people come and drop off their requests on people they want her to kill. She is very famous in London and is known as the "Perfect Killer" because all of her murders are perfect with no traces of evidence left. This is one of my most favorite books because of how thrilling it is. I have read this book more than 2 times and every time I read it all at once because I just can't put it down. I love how theirs this realistic sense to it that shows that this isn't all fiction and that things like this can happen in real life. I also love how the author made the main character a teenage girl because most people associate killers and murderers with men, so its nice change in all the stereotypes. "Dear Killer" gives off a very powerful message about the things that are needed in life. It showed that everything had a place here and were needed for everything to function properly and that theres is always a positive side to everything. For instance, Kit had a very important role in their society because the murders brought people together and showed that they can dependent on each other when needed. It also helped bring some excitement and thrill to her boring town and people are always thinking about her and waiting for her to strike again. She helps people be more cautious and aware of themselves and their surroundings.

Claudius

March 03, 2014

Ok, you know, bad ass killer who has her heart in her right spot and actually does not kill. Only accidentally and totally excusable. Talks a lot about her badass attitude but has not much to prove it. There are troves of these novels out there.This is not one of them.This is the story of a heavily disturbed girl who kills people like flies. She has some really big issues. And besides all that one cannot deny a certain sympathy with her. It is a fascinating read. The plot is well thought out, the pacing is good, it is funny in a very, very morbid way, and the novel never steps in the obvious traps it could stumble into, like romance or redemption. Or at least not in a disgusting butterfly-and-pretty-flowers way. I subtracted one star because her mistake in the last kill was too obvious and a bit more of how her future would be would have been nice. But it still is a recommended read, though not for the depressed or otherwise mentally unstable.

Kira

October 17, 2015

** spoiler alert ** Oh my god. This was really really good. 0-0Like really really good.The characters are likable, even at the end when the killer, Liv, is caught and Alex doesn't actually want to catch her but, the police man side of him must.The plot was really straight forward and there was no mystery (unless you count the fact that the killer is a police man's BFF lol.)Overall, I really liked the book and would recommend it for those who like action and (not much) psychological (love)?:) 5/5 stars.Also, this book is NOT for everyone. It has no romance, the so-called "heroine" is a killer, and her views are twisted. Those are pretty much the reasons I loved the book.

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