Hannibal (Hannibal Lecter, #3) by Thomas Harris


Hannibal (Hannibal Lecter, #3)
Title : Hannibal (Hannibal Lecter, #3)
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : -
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 564
Publication : First published June 8, 1999
Awards : Bram Stoker Award Best Novel (1999), Puddly Award Thriller (2001)

Years after his escape, posing as scholarly Dr. Fell, curator of a grand family's palazzo, Hannibal lives the good life in Florence, playing lovely tunes by serial killer/composer Henry VIII and killing hardly anyone himself. Clarice is unluckier: in the novel's action-film-like opening scene, she survives an FBI shootout gone wrong, and her nemesis, Paul Krendler, makes her the fall guy. Clarice is suspended, so, unfortunately, the first cop who stumbles on Hannibal is an Italian named Pazzi, who takes after his ancestors, greedy betrayers depicted in Dante's Inferno. Pazzi is on the take from a character as scary as Hannibal: Mason Verger. When Verger was a young man busted for raping children, his vast wealth saved him from jail. All he needed was psychotherapy--with Dr. Lecter. Thanks to the treatment, Verger is now on a respirator, paralyzed except for one crablike hand, watching his enormous, brutal moray eel swim figure eights and devour fish. His obsession is to feed Lecter to some other brutal pets.


Hannibal (Hannibal Lecter, #3) Reviews


  • Ahmad Sharabiani

    Hannibal (Hannibal Lecter #3), Thomas Harris

    Hannibal is a novel by American author Thomas Harris, published in 1999. It is the third in his series featuring Dr. Hannibal Lecter and the second to feature FBI Special Agent Clarice Starling.

    The novel takes place seven years after the events of The Silence of the Lambs and deals with the intended revenge of one of Lecter's victims.

    It was adapted as a film of the same name in 2001, directed by Ridley Scott.

    عنوانهای چاپ شده در ایران: «هانیبال»؛ «ادامه ی سکوت بره ها»؛ «پرونده هانیبال»؛ نویسنده: توماس هریس؛ تاریخ نخستین خوانش: روز هفتم ماه فوریه سال 2000میلادی

    عنوان: هانیبال؛ نویسنده: توماس هریس؛ مترجم: اصغر اندرودی؛ تهران، نشر البرز؛ 1378؛ در 615ص؛ شابک 9644422333؛ موضوع داستانهای ترسناک از نویسندگان ایالات متحده آمریکا - سده 20م

    عنوان: هانیبال؛ نویسنده: توماس هریس؛ مترجم: شهناز مهدوی؛ تهران، نشر هامان؛ 1378؛ در 598ص؛ شابک 9649221816؛

    عنوان: هانیبال؛ نویسنده: توماس هریس؛ مترجم: کورس جهانبیگلو؛ تهران، دایره؛ 1378؛ در 374ص؛ شابک ایکس - 964683924؛ چاپ دوم سال1388 ؛ شابک 9789646839243؛

    عنوان: پرونده هانیبال؛ نویسنده: توماس هریس؛ مترجم: مجید نوریان؛ تهران، چکاوک؛ 1389؛ در 366ص؛ چاپ دوم 1390؛ شابک9789648957242؛

    عنوان: هانیبال؛ نویسنده: توماس هریس؛ مترجم: الهام دژکام؛ تهران، ؛ 1390؛ در 519ص؛ شابک 9789648957266؛

    کتاب نخست از این سری «اژدهای سرخ» نام داشت، که «هانیبال» در پایان آن داستان، به زندان میافتد؛ کتاب دوم «سکوت بره ها» است، که «هانیبال» را پشت درهای بسته ی زندان امنیتی میبینیم، در حالیکه «کلاریس استارلینگ»، مامور تازه کار «اف.بی.آی»، کوشش میکند، برای به دام انداختن «بیل بوفالو»، قاتل بیرحم از او یاری بگیرد؛ «توماس هریس»، پس از کتاب «سکوت بره ها»، کتاب سوم را با عنوان «هانیبال» بنوشتند؛ که ادامه ی داستان «کلاریس» و «لکتر» را بازگو میکرد؛ نویسنده در ادامه، کتاب چهارم «خیزش هانیبال»؛ را در سال 2006میلادی به چاپ سپردند، که داستان کودکی «هانیبال»، و ظهور او را بازگو میکند؛ بسیارانی کنجکاو بودند، و هستند، تا از خاستگاه این هیولای آدمخوار، سر دربیاورند، و این کتابها قرار بود پاسخ پرسش آنها را بدهد؛ هیچ یک از این کتابها به موفقیت «سکوت بره ها» دست پیدا نکردند

    تاریخ بهنگام رسانی 02/08/1399هجری خورشیدی؛ 21/06/1400هجری خورشیدی؛ ا. شربیانی

  • Peggy

    Okay, let me confess up front: I loved Red Dragon and The Silence of the Lambs. Loved them. I enjoyed the movies, too: the movie version of Silence of the Lambs scared the pee out of me, and even so, I didn’t want it to end. So, long years later when I finally got hold of a copy of Hannibal, I really, really, wanted to love it, too.

    But I didn’t.

    Well, that’s not entirely true. If I pretend that this wasn’t a sequel about characters I already know, then I can find some bright spots. The book has some fantastic descriptions of Italy. There are certainly some creepy scenes that gave me the shivers. I was fascinated by the concept of the memory cathedral. And I felt terribly bad for poor Clarice as her world crumbled in around her. The problem is, none of the characters seem remotely connected to the folks we met before.

    Hannibal Lecter, an enigma in previous installments, now has a background. It’s tragic and horrifying, but is it enough to form the Hannibal we all know? Maybe. But even if it is, do we really have to know the details of why Lecter is who he is? I’m not convinced that this information makes him a more compelling character.

    Clarice Starling, whose wagon was hitched to a rising star at the end of Silence, is on the verge of being pushed out of the FBI. She has been overlooked again and again for promotion and is reduced to being scapegoated by talentless superiors.

    Jack Crawford, a hero and mentor in the previous books, is now (for the short time he appears here) a liability.

    I understand that people change, but come on. So what happened? What changed between the publication of The Silence of the Lambs and the publication of Hannibal? Well, what changed was the character of Hannibal Lecter. In both Red Dragon and The Silence of the Lambs, Hannibal was a minor (though quite compelling) character. Harris went to great pains to point out that, although clever and extremely cunning, Lecter was not omniscient. There was always an explanation as to how he knew the things he did, and Crawford was equally clever at figuring it out. Enter Jonathan Demme.

    When Jonathan Demme made the movie version of Silence, he said that he wanted the audience to believe that Lecter was the smartest man alive. It didn’t matter how he knew the things he did—he just knew. And to the credit of both Demme and Anthony Hopkins, it worked. The movie firmly established Lecter’s genius, and in the context of the film, it was brilliant: you never have to explain how Lecter gets his information, and his outrageous escape becomes plausible. Besides, the smarter Lecter is the more the audience worries about Clarice. Hopkins’ performance firmly established a picture in our minds of who Lecter was and how he worked.

    Enter Thomas Harris, trying to write a sequel to a phenomenally popular book, which was also a hugely successful movie. Now everyone thought of Anthony Hopkins when they thought of Hannibal Lecter, and they believed he was the smartest psycho alive. Instead of writing about his own Hannibal, he tried to write about the Demme/Hopkins Hannibal, and that just didn’t leave him anyplace to go but over the top, which is a crying shame. The book collapses under the sheer magnitude of what we are expected to accept about these characters and where they end up.

  • Matthew

    It has been many years since I read a Hannibal Lecter book. The last Thomas Harris book I read was a couple of years ago, Black Sunday, and is very different from his Lecter titles. I noticed some of my friends were doing a buddy read of Hannibal, so I figured it was about time to give it a try

    I will say 3 to 3.5 stars.

    I liked it. But, it was a fifty/fifty thing. Half of it was the gruesome, suspenseful, mysterious story that I remember from previous Lecter books and movies. The other half was drawn out, slow, and sometimes uncomfortable weirdness. I think that some people might enjoy those parts, but to me they just felt like filler. And, the uncomfortable weirdness was in the few spots where it went from believable insanity to silly WTF-ness. A big part of this for me was the end - it just got way too out there to be satisfying.

    Overall, what it felt like to me was like Harris did so well with Red Dragon and Silence of the Lambs, that his publisher convinced him to write the next chapter in Lecter story and he just didn't have enough for a full novel. So, in order to get a complete book, the came up with some bizarre stuff to fluff it up a bit. I don't think that everyone will feel this way about it, but I couldn't avoid feeling that way no matter how much I kept hoping it would click for me before the end.

    I will finish my review by saying, despite my criticisms, I was entertained throughout. So, even at those points when I was scratching my head at the aforementioned WTF-ness, I was still enjoying the book. This might seem a bit of an oxymoron - enjoying a book while at the same time not being satisfied - but, that is how it was!

    Note on audiobook - I don't recommend. I was not super impressed with the narrator and there is a character who cannot talk very well (to say any more would be a spoiler), so it is very hard to understand at times.

  • Alejandro

    He’s Hannibal alright, but she’s not Clarice!


    This is the third novel in the “Hannibal Lecter” book series.


    WILL THE REAL MAIN CHARACTER PLEASE STAND UP?

    I already explained in my review of The Silence of the Lambs that I became fan of the story for Clarice Starling instead of Dr. Hannibal Lecter, and pondering about the “ball effective time” of Lecter in the first two books, I still believe that Thomas Harris never thought that Hannibal Lecter would become the leading character in the book series,…

    …but for better or worse, after the successful film, people embraced the character of Dr. Hannibal Lecter as the main one in the saga…

    …so it was logic now, that third book would be title Hannibal, so there wasn’t any doubt now that Lecter was the protagonist of the book series and the investigators Will Graham and Clarice Starling were just unlucky pawns of Dr. Lecter’ story.

    It was HIS story.

    Not Will’s, not Clarice’s, HIS.

    Will Graham had left the game. But Clarice could still make a second swing…

    …but Harris made the wrong call, in my humble opinion.


    (NOT) UNDERSTANDING THE MONSTER

    In real life, monsters (because monsters exist) don’t need a reason to do what they do, and how they do it, sometimes it’s explained, but sometimes they are just…

    …monsters.

    However, in literature, there is a need of reason, a need of order, a need to avoid senseless chaos, if the monsters have a reason of what they do, how they do it,…

    …readers tend to accept the monsters.

    So, while the whole backstory of Hannibal Lecter would be deeply exposed in his following novel, Hannibal Rising, here, you learn the real crucial piece of information about the past of Lecter which gives you the key to understand the monster…

    …and while Harris seemed to develop the book’s story according to that…

    …at the end…

    …I don’t believe he understood Lecter, for not saying Starling neither.


    (REALLY) KNOW YOUR CHARACTERS

    FBI Special Agent Clarice Starling was the star rookie thanks to catch “Buffalo Bill” even before of her formal graduation from Quantico, but…

    …that was seven years ago, and you can’t survive of only past glories, and she has just did an unspeakable mistake in a field assignment…

    …even Dr. Hannibal Lecter is worried about Clarice’s future.

    However, Dr. Lecter should be worried about himself since with a life doing so many wrong things to so many dangerous people, it was obvious that sooner or later, someone from his dark past would catch on him, looking for reckoning.

    Evil faces evil…

    …and Clarice’s mental health is in the middle.

    To be honest, two thirds of the book were quite well developed, showing many of the darkest things that human beings can do to other human beings…

    …it was the final act (don’t worry, I won’t spoil it) that I humbly think that Thomas Harris made the wrong call, A VERY WRONG CALL, with the characters of Hannibal and Clarice, not understanding the real reason of why they were so obssessed with each other…

    …and while you may think that only Clarice was ruined as character and that Hannibal wasn’t that bad ruined, trust me, if you understand Hannibal, even him was ruined to a level…

    …since even a monster can only fall to a certain degree, to avoid twisting its own code of why, what, how and to whom, do things.

  • ☘Misericordia☘ ⚡ϟ⚡⛈⚡☁ ❇️❤❣

    DD 10/01/2017 Hated it passionately. This is that rare case where books are even worse than films, if you can believe it. I don't know whatever possessed me to flip through this series. Thankfully, that entity (demon of boredom? cluelesness?) was swiftly exorcised by pretty average writing, plot with Boeing-sized holes (were we really supposed to believe in vanishing special agents who almost no one conveniently gives a damn about?) and nauseating character-building. So far this is a DNF. Left this unfinished and I don't think I'll ever return to it (of my own free will). Or maybe I will, let's live and see about it.

    This series felt a bit stupid, stilted, pretentious, even. It felt as if Lecter was made and MADE and freaking forced to look like an intellectual. And he didn't come across as one. Or maybe I'm judging intellect on a scale which includes the humanity factor, or lack thereof? Not sure about that.

    I didn't like the language.
    The heroes felt without depth.
    Or maybe I just don't like this concept due to severely disliking the TV snippets of this that have been irritating me to no end for ages.
    The cannibal idea made me queasy. I can't fathom just how this stuff managed to give rise to that fan thing, where people would go on to even watch series on this topic. It'a goddamn mystery to me. The fact that our protagonist happens to be severely intellectual changes nothing for me. It doesn't add him any charm or any je-ne-sais-quoi or whatever it was that made this stuff popularish. Personally, I don't give a damn if a cannibal killer is an illuminating person or not. And a true intellectual? Don't think he was. I'm sure such an illuminated thinker might have found some other stuff to eat besides fellow humans, if only to be left alone by the society to pursue their oh-so-deep intellectual endeavours.

    The story with Clarice was, uh, nauseating. How do you really craft a supposedly love story (or whatever it was even supposed to look like!) out of a story line with chemically assisted brainwashing??? That's what it truly was, things should be called their own names!!! And I don't really give a damn about Dr. Lecter's string theory equations (was that supposed to make him more likeable, him penning supposedly brilliant time physics while drugging Clarice out of her mind??). It does not make me sympathise with him, not at all.

    I'm not rating it so far because it feels worthy of a 1 measly star (for the writer's effort and wasted time, nothing else). Still, all those fans, they couldn't have been totally mistaken about this series. Or could they? I'll give it some time to sit with me. Maybe I missed something totally notable and earth-shattering about it and will find it someday. .(Hopefully, that will not be that sad day my shrink goes to his one)..

    At this point, it's obvious to me that it was a mistake to read this. Note to self: I neet to be more scrupulous about choosing what I read. Otherwise I'm going to be investing a lot more of my time into stuff I find distasteful!

    Q:
    She was in the garden of the hurricane’s eye. (c)
    Q:
    She was awake and not awake. The bathroom was indeed comfortable and furnished with every amenity. In the following days she enjoyed long baths there, but she did not bother with her reflection in the mirror, so far was she from herself. (c)
    Q:
    “Mason is dead.”
    “Ummmm,” Starling said. “Would you play for me?” (c)
    Q:
    Starling had no sense of time. Over the days and nights there were the conversations. She heard herself speaking for minutes on end, and she listened.
    Sometimes she laughed at herself, hearing artless revelations that normally would have mortified her. The things she told Dr. Lecter were often surprising to her, sometimes distasteful to a normal sensibility, but what she said was always true. And Dr. Lecter spoke as well. In a low, even voice. He expressed interest and encouragement, but never surprise or censure. (c)
    Q:
    Sometimes they looked at a single bright object together to begin their talks, almost always there was but a single light source in the room. From day to day the bright object changed. (c) Oh, yes, YES! The fact they they might have hypnotised each other, or gotten self-hypnotised together or whatever that was, is supposed to make this special, I'm sure. Kidding!
    Q:
    Dr. Lecter seemed to sense their arrival at an unexplored gallery in her mind. Perhaps he heard trolls fighting on the other side of a wall. (c) Made me think of all those insufferable 'internal goddess' references in the 50 shades. Only here we get a gardenful of trolls instead! How unusual.
    Q:
    He replaced the teapot with a silver belt buckle.
    “That’s my daddy’s,” Starling said. She clapped her hands together like a child.
    “Yes,” Dr. Lecter said. “Clarice, would you like to talk with your father? Your father is here. Would you like to talk with him?”
    “My daddy’s here! Hey! All right!” (c) Vomit-inducing. This is exactly what I say when I see people so fascinated with all the shiny badges of merit, such as Doctor, Professor, President, etc. that they would miss what is right in front of them. This is a travesty of psychology. And 'Dr. Lecter' is no doctor,
    he might have been one at some point (or not!) but he is not one, after indulging in all his hobbies.

    Q:
    The monster settled back a micron in his chair. (c) For once, a correct reference.
    Q:
    Mr. Krendler is joining us for our first course. (c) Nasty! NASTY! I'm not going to give the detailed details here but they are extremely nasty. This is probably the worst thing I have ever read. Gross!
    Q:
    Dr. Lecter and Clarice Starling often talk at dinner in languages other than Starling’s native English. She had college French and Spanish to build on, and she has found she has a good ear. They speak Italian a lot at meal-times; she finds a curious freedom in the visual nuances of the language. (c) Once again, a pitiful attempt at either intellectuality or closeness: 'Oh, yeah, so they speak 3 foreign languages, they found each other, the intellectual soulmates, SQUEAAL!' For one thing, I don't think a couple of people with the depicted level of issues (to put it very mildly!) would be able or even want to get really close to each other. And there are lots of true polyglots out there, who have mastered a lot more languages and don't think it anything fancy. A very lame scene.
    Q:
    Their relationship has a great deal to do with the penetration of Clarice Starling, which she avidly welcomes and encourages...Sex is a splendid structure they add to every day. (c) Uh-huh, of her own free will, of course, NOT.
    Q:
    It is hard to know what Starling remembers of the old life, what she chooses to keep. The drugs that held her in the first days have had no part in their lives for a long time. Nor the long talks with a single light source in the room. (c) So, we are informed that the gal has been weaned off the drugs but is still on hypnosis. Good to know kidney failure might not be her next option. Still, I'm not really sure what purpose this achieves, ethic or aesthethic. Are we supposed to conclude at this point that hypnosis brainwashing is good for one's psyche?
    Q:
    We’ll withdraw now, while they are dancing on the terrace—the wise Barney has already left town and we must follow his example. For either of them to discover us would be fatal.
    We can only learn so much and live. (c) I can't help thinking it would have been best had I continued ignoring this series.

  • *TANYA*

    Hannibal happens to be one of my favorite fictional characters and with this book I became more enamored with him. Yes, it's twisted but me likes him a lot!!

  • Tristan

    “Did you ever think, Clarice, why the Philistines don't understand you? It's because you are the answer to Samson's riddle. You are the honey in the lion.”


    Clearly, the world didn’t need ( 'want' is another matter, of course ) one more novel featuring Hannibal Lecter. At the end of Silence of the Lambs, the good doctor had escaped the clutches of the law, after having treated the local authorities to a grotesque display of Grand Guignol theatre by way of parting gift.

    description

    This was a more than fitting, infinitely memorable adieu to the cannibal, who from his first appearance in Red Dragon never was supposed to be a main character, let alone the protagonist. But of course Harris - for a variety of reasons, financial considerations probably being the main one - couldn’t resist revisiting Lecter, and 11 years after Silence of the Lambs, Hannibal arrived, which places Lecter prominently in the foreground, now living in Florence as a museum curator under the alias of Dr. Fell.

    As can be expected, the mere fact of him being no longer confined significantly diminishes the interest the character previously managed to pique. Locked up, with only his intellect and ingenuity at his disposal to manipulate whatever unfortunate soul he deems worthy, he represented a much more intriguing, insidious creature. One only has to recall that one time he managed to talk a fellow inmate into biting off and swallowing his tongue just by whispering to him at night. What those words were exactly, no one knows, and that’s precisely what makes it disturbing.

    Oddly, Harris in a rare moment of authorial commentary, almost inadvertently intimates this fact in Hannibal:

    “Dr. Lecter stood at a distance from her, very still, as he had stood in his cell when she first saw him. We are accustomed to seeing him unfettered now. It is not shocking to see him in open space with another mortal creature.”

    Not shocking, you say? Thank you for proving my point for me, Mr. Harris.

    My previous “issue” with Red Dragon and Silence of the Lambs consisted of there being not much new material in those books, since they both had been rather literally adapted (in the case of Red Dragon, twice) with few deviations. The problem rested with me, not with the books themselves.

    With Hannibal though, you get quite a different animal, which initially delighted me. There is a substantial subplot involving Mason’s peculiar sister, Hannibal’s traumatic memory of the tragic fate of his sister Mischa plays a considerable role, and Ardelia Mapp and Jack Crawford (both excised from the film) have been carried over from Silence of the Lambs, which make for wonderful additions to the plot, even though my reservations about a freely operating Lecter were still very much present. Yet, for being an otherwise accomplished, even highly enjoyable thriller, Hannibal unfortunately ends with a callous betrayal.

    Not of the kind perpetrated by one fictional character to another mind you, but by the author to his audience. As endings go, it surely must go down in history as one of the most ill-advised and ignominious. Normally I am a passionate advocate for the idea of the creator’s absolute sovereignty, who is under no obligation whatsoever to accommodate his audience. Yet here both Harris’ lack of judgment and the unwillingness (cowardice?) of his editor to stand firm and demand the ending to be replaced simply must be deplored.

    A mere 20 pages. That’s all it took for Harris to destroy the essence of Clarice Starling, one of the best loved female characters in all of fiction, only in order to ham-fistedly drive home the theme of mutual attraction between her and Lecter. Granted, this dynamic between the two was always there, lurking beneath the surface, but the impossibility of it ever materializing was exactly what made it interesting. Yet Hannibal ends as a twisted love story, fully consummated, which Harris apparently feels the need to make explicit in detail:

    "Their relationship has a great deal to do with the penetration of Clarice Starling, which she avidly welcomes and encourages."

    Yes, it actually says that. It's not so much the exploration of Starling as a sexual being that is irksome here (previously, she was almost solely focussed on her career, with not much thought given to romantic interactions with men) but how she is just undergoing the process, as if she has no agency. This is a radical departure from the individual established in Silence of the Lambs who, even in her inexperience as a rookie, very much had a mind of her own. That one line is absolutely devastating to this character.

    Starling was intrigued by Lecter to be sure, but she wasn’t as foolish as to think some healthy relationship could ever be maintained with him, an amoral cannibal. I didn’t buy it, even if she was initially under the influence of drugs and hypnosis. It’s clear in later passages she isn’t anymore under that influence, but actually chooses this life, with all her mental faculties intact. It totally goes against all we had come to learn about her. Above all else, Starling is strong-willed, highly intelligent, determined and has a rock-solid moral compass.

    It’s incredible that Harris didn’t realize those were the exact qualities that made her so popular in the first place. Ultimately, she just ends up as Lecter’s plaything, a puppet of his own creation. It really makes one wonder what went on in the author’s head at the time. Was he under time restraint, his deadline fast approaching? I'd really love to know the answer to that one.

    Hannibal is far from being a bad book, and I suggest you do read it, but go in with expectations tempered. With the ending being what it is, I can’t possibly give it more than two stars. Just goes to show that even if the first 500 or so pages were good and some passages even quite excellent, the whole enterprise can be ruined by the subsequent twenty.

    It's one of the most delicious of ironies that Thomas Harris - the creator of a famous fictional cannibal - would end up cannibalizing his own work.

  • Noiresque

    I have a theory about this horrible book.

    Both
    Red Dragon and
    The Silence of the Lambs are formidable pieces of pop fiction. They are well-written thrillers with great descriptions and characters. They were both adapted into great movies. They made
    Thomas Harris a very rich man.

    I think Mr. Harris made a bet, maybe with a friend or just to himself. He knew that his next novel would be snapped up for big bucks for the screen rights. He knew he would not get any control over the script. So he decided to write a book that would basically be un-filmable. It would be so preposterous, such dreck, that it would drive the screenwriters crazy. And Mr. Harris would be laughing all the way to the bank.

    This theory makes it possible to think that Thomas Harris is talented. There are other theories that eliminate that possibility. Of course, the publication of
    Hannibal Rising kind of shot my theory all to hell.

    I can't believe I was so excited about this book that I rushed out to buy it in hardcover. Ugh. I sold it to a used bookstore at the first opportunity.

  • Erin

    Who knew The Hannibal Lecter series was a love story.

    What Da Fuck did I just read?

    I was hesitant to read Hannibal, various people told they hated the book and Everyone said they hated the movie and since I Loved both the book and movie versions of Red Dragon & The Silence of the Lambs...I was worried...Very worried. I waited over a month between finishing Lambs and starting Hannibal. I just kept putting it off & putting it off until I finally decided to force myself to read it for my Read-A-Thon and I started reading it Friday & finished on Sunday because despite the 544 page count Hannibal is a fast read.

    Hannibal picks up 6 or 7 years after the events of Lambs, Hannibal is in Italy living his best life as a fugitive. Clarice Starling is still at the FBI but her once promising career has stalled. Hannibal's only surviving victim has put a bounty out on him and he has the money to follow though with it. We finally start to get some background on Hannibal and we are shown a bit of Hannibal's psyche. The entire book is great but the last 100 pages are bat shit crazy and I'm not sure how I feel about it. The last 3 chapters were the most unsettling in the whole book and if you've read the book you know what I'm talking about. I'm undecided on if I'll watch the movie but probably yes.

    If you've started the Hannibal Lecter series I recommend reading Hannibal despite what you've heard about the movie.

    2018 Popsugar Reading Challenge: A Book About A Villain or Antihero.

    Around the year in 52 books: A book set in a country you'd like to visit but have never been to.

  • Kerri

    Please note my review also contains spoilers for DRACULA (I'm mainly referring to the 1992 film, 'Bram Stoker's Dracula', starring Gary Oldman and Winona Ryder, but it applies to any Dracula story, including the novel).

    I found this to be the perfect ending to The Hannibal Lecter Trilogy. As soon as I finished it, I knew there would be a lot of people who would NOT be happy with the ending. That's fine, and I understand their points, but I loved it!
    This book is much more focused on Hannibal Lecter than the previous two - as the title implies. Clarice and Hannibal have almost been switched around here, in terms of the amount of time each is featured. Clarice is ever present in Hannibal's mind much as he was ever present in hers during the last book. Mason is a horrifying villain, and in the battle between him and Lecter, I was firmly rooting for Lecter.
    As I said, I loved the ending. It almost felt like a retelling of the conclusion of Dracula in some ways for me - a large part of me had always felt Mina and Dracula should have ended up together, a kind of twisted happy ever after. So of course, having Dr. Hannibal Lecter and Clarice Starling together was my ideal ending.

    This series as a whole is new favourite of mine - Perfect lockdown reading! 🐗

  • Stargirl

    Oh that ending. Sublime.

    Gothic horror detective chase story, blends genres with great ease, affirming Harris as a master storyteller- as if we didn't already know. Don't go in expecting another Red Dragon or Silence of the Lambs. This is a much bigger, far darker experience. It's all in the title people. Silence was the story of Clarice Starling, so there is a lot of hope and innocence to it. This one, is about the dark side of her character- and of that awful/awesome Doctor Mr Lecter himself.

    A decadent spiral into madness and obliteration. A glimpse into hell.

    The quality of the writing is of the highest order, blurring the lines between popular fiction and literature.

    Ingenious and over the top, a true sequel that shows no mercy.

    And the ending... Sweet God. It really puts the reader in his/her place, reminding you that you have no control over the characters you read. The author is in charge and he will take you into places, dragging and screaming, that you don't want to know. Harris is James Gumb from Silence of the Lambs and this book is the pit he threw Catherine Martin into. Only she escaped . . .

  • Jess☺️

    OH MY GOD, OH MY GOD, OH MY GOD !!!! Hannibal by Thomas Harris is the 3rd book in the Hannibal Lector series and I need more 🌟 this is my favourite and I think the best one of the series.
    It's more creepy, more edge of your seat thrilling and a little more gory/scary ( starving boars/ wild pig's and people eating and threating to eat people 🤢 enough said ) oh did I forget the big twist at the end 😱
    This series is a series I recommend for everyone to read , The film's/TV series do a great job but we get a lot more insight into the characters.
    Hannibal Lector is definitely the character we love to hate.(Or is that just me 😬)

  • Ginger

    Jesh, I have to say it. Cover your ears if you can’t handle profanity.

    But for fucks sake was that ending?!!
    Because of the way Hannibal ended, I can’t rate this higher then 2.5 STARS.

    Hannibal almost put me into a book slump. I’m not lying. I’ve read Red Dragon and The Silence of the Lambs and loved both. I couldn’t put either book down and was obsessed.

    With Hannibal, I didn’t even want to pick it up at times. Thank goodness I read other books at the same time and the dreaded book slump didn’t get me!

    Almost all the characters in this book are abhorrent, evil and vile. I need to take a hot shower now to clean off the gross.
    I’ve never wanted two characters more in a book to die.


    Also, the pacing was off for this book. I think Thomas Harris could have cut about 100 to 150 pages. The part in Italy took too long and the writing was just strange. Maybe he should have just cut the end?! hahaha *long sigh*



    Am I glad I read it? I guess. I’m glad I read it with friends and had moral support to finish it!
    In my opinion, just stick with Red Dragon and The Silence of the Lambs. You'll thank me later.

  • Ashley Daviau

    I’m very surprised to see so many low ratings for this novel as I thought it was a masterpiece and by far the best book out of the series so far! I couldn’t turn the pages fast enough to find out what would happen, I was absolutely fascinated by this installment and loved how action packed it was. There really wasn’t a dull moment and I LOVED that it was much more gory than the previous novels, I love me so good gore! I also really enjoyed getting to know Clarice more in depth and to really see Hannibal take control of her, it was absolutely fascinating to see and my favourite part of this novel.

  • Sara the Librarian

    In the interest of full disclosure blah blah Hannibal is my aesthetic yadda yadda Mads Mikkelsen herp de derp cheekbones blah blah darkness is sexy.

    In all seriousness if you’re reading this I’m going to assume that 1.) You’ve got at least a working knowledge of Hannibal Lecter and his adventures and also possibly 2.) You’re a friend of Matthew’s and you think its just HILARIOUS that he makes me write these.

    Incidentally Matthew I hate you. Look I made a shelf about it!

    I like this book. I would, in fact, go so far as to say this is my second favorite Hannibal Lecter book after
    Red Dragon. Many fans of Dr. Lecter will disagree violently with me but to me this book and its ending is the only possible way that Dr. Lecter and Clarise Starling's story could have ended.

    For the sake of everyone's sanity (no one wants to hear me talk about cheekbones and Danish accents trust me we’d be here all night) I'll be talking strictly about the books here though I'd be lying if I said my appreciation for the books hasn't been colored by the television show. Cause it has.

    To refresh your memory and because I am aware that not everyone is quite as addicted to this character as I am and thus does not retain practically perfect recall of every part of his story let me remind you that when we last left the erudite, dashing, brilliant, cannibalistic Dr. Lecter he was assuring FBI trainee Clarice Starling that while her solving of the kidnapping of Catherine Martin and the subsequent killing of Buffalo Bill might "silence the screaming of the lambs" for her for the moment, that silence would not last forever. He reminded Clarice that, having escaped custody by taking a leaf out of Leatherface's book, he had "no plans to call on you" finding the world more interesting with her in it.

    I'm probably blending the movie and the book a bit there but I do so love that line. If you know Hannibal at all you know the worst thing he can be is bored. His MO isn't so much murder as it is manipulation of the people around him just to see what will happen. Sometimes that includes murder, of course, but in the end his needs seem much more wrapped up in living, breathing people and how they move through the world. He has no empathy so he's totally unfettered by all the societal conventions and feelings that keep the rest of us from acting on all of our impulses, good and bad, and he takes full advantage. As I've said before part of my attraction to him resides in wishing I could live the same way. To a degree. Of course.

    He's also always been on a quest for someone to share that life with. At least that's how I've interpreted it. Thomas Harris has never been especially forthcoming about the relationship Hannibal (I like to think we'd be on a first name basis if he were real) had with his first "protege" Will Graham, the FBI profiler gifted with such an intense sense of empathy it essentially drove him mad, but I see that relationship as something of a high school romance. It was fraught with high emotion and passion with Graham constantly fighting his worse impulses and Hannibal doing his damndest to bring them out. It's that first relationship we all go through that's all wrong and dramatic and sort of sets the tone for everything that comes after.

    Clarice Starling is Hannibal's after.

    She's sort of a Will Graham 2.0. Gifted with the same intense intelligence but not handicapped by Graham's affinity for evil. She knows right from wrong, its the core of her existence, its what's taken her all the way to the FBI and who knows what she might have gone on to do had she not walked into Hannibal's sights.

    They dance a beautiful dance around each other in
    The Silence of the Lambs, like a slow burning romance, a really fucked up one but still a romance of sorts. Harris never says a blessed word about attraction or desire, and the only time its mentioned is when one of them is pointedly denying it exists.

    But they do seem to require one another. Because when
    Hannibal begins they are both of them adrift. Clarice's career with the FBI has stalled after a disastrous case and an unfortunate personal issue with a superior. Hannibal is spinning his wheels in Florence. He's got his view of the Duomo from the Belvedere and after some fancy footwork a job in the art world but its all so much window dressing, there's nothing for him to...sink his teeth into (sorry couldn't help it).

    Yes, the novel stalls out a bit while Hannibal galavants around Florence murdering people, and buying Clarice perfume, and baffling a bumbling Italian detective. That story goes on so long it might as well be its own novel. But, there's an interesting third player added to the mix who soon changes the game. A good old fashioned Thomas Harris nasty.

    Mason Verger is just disgusting. He's not even attractively disgusting like Buffalo Bill or sympathetically disgusting like Francis Dolarhyde, he's just plain disgusting. A former patient of Lecter's, he's now intent on capturing Lecter and paying him back for a drug fueled night of barbaric debauchery that left him in a wheelchair (among other things). When Verger's agents attempt to capture Lecter he senses that Starling is tied up in this somehow and despite the risk, or perhaps because of it, he returns to the US to find her.

    Wackiness ensues!

    Is it a touch melodramatic? Well its a book about a cannibal genius who's in love with an FBI agent and trying to elude a guy with no face who wants to feed him to pigs so you tell me.

    Is there something a little weird and icky about trying to actually make Lecter a hero by putting him up against someone who kind of deserved all the terrible stuff Lecter did to him? Yeah it kind of dulls Lecter’s claws a bit.

    Is it uncomfortably homophobic at times? Yes, yes it is. Mason Verger has a lesbian sister who is like your grandfather's concept of what a lesbian is. So she's addicted to steroids, ripped harder then Rambo, and fond of crew cuts and, according to Harris, at least partly into women because she was molested as a child.

    Did I have a weird urge to find out what brains taste like after reading it? I'm not answering that.

    But of course whatever you thought about the book as a whole, the real issue for everyone is the ending. Everyone always loses their damn minds because Here's what I think. It just makes sense.

    The world is just a more interesting place with these two in it.

  • Erin *Proud Book Hoarder*

    **Note - After my re-read on 3/24/15, have bumped from four to five stars and edited review a little. *

    I read the four books in order of sequence, not publication, ending with Hannibal. I'm not sure if it was following them in order or my mood, but I was more enamored this time around. It's turned out to be my favorite in the series. I know this isn't the popular opinion, but I think Harris did a brilliant job wrapping up the series.

    The plot is as diabolical as Silence of the Lambs was, this time concentrating more on Clarice and Hannibal’s “relationship.” Hannibal Lecter is explored a lot more through internal dialogue; I learned a about his though process (disturbing as it was). I sat back in awe at his life experiences, his true motivations, and the odd little ‘room in his mind.’ The person inside of me interested in psychology found his detachment methods fascinating. His motivations, while not morally just, were made clearer by seeing it through his point of view. While I’d never agree with his actions, it was still better than being left in the dark. As always, I loved being in Clarices’ head. She’s morally righteous, determined, hard working, loyal and honest;­ the change she went through nearly stopped my breath.

    As mentioned before with the story, I DID lose interest after the beginning to a little after the center. The pacing was even during that time, but the material just didn’t keep my eyes wandering. I'm referring to that stint in Italy, which dulled a little and I wish Harris had spent a little less time in that section.

    Harris’s style, particularly when focusing on Lecter and Sterling, was intense and clever. His wording was sophisticated and drama-filled, sounding disturbing when it should have been. His use of dialogue was realistic, his action scenes well sketched so that the most damage that could be done to my nerves was. His sense of irony with plot really sang through.

    The ending of Hannibal is one of the most powerful I’ve ever read. I literally sat back and had to think for over an hour afterward…seriously. Not many books shake me up like that at the end; the last was a few years back by Sidney Sheldon. The novel wrap up was different than it’s cinema relative; don’t go in expected the same thing you see on screen, because it WONT HAPPEN.

    I wasn’t sure what emotion was appropriate when I read the finale. Mainly I was disturbed, as well as saddened, but in a strange, strange, strange, place deep inside, I was also pleased. (!) I don’t know what this says about ME, but the bottom line is Harris did his job so well with the last scenes, he almost did it a little ‘too’ well.

    It ties into the becoming, that bizarre act of transformation focused on by Jame Gumb, made famous in the series most famous work, Silence of the Lamb. To wrap up the series on that note is genius in its circular resolution. What Clarice revealed about herself, the price she paid as she sought to stop a madman from transforming an innocent woman into his vision of himself is now transferred to the second madman, the one who helped her stop the first.

    I couldn’t decide whether I should give it a four or a five rating; because of the middle lagging, I was going to settle on a four, but because of the powerful influence the ending had (it’s hard to impress me on THAT level), I just have to give it a five. It more than made up for its faults.

    Read Hannibal and experience the trauma for yourself. This novel doesn’t hesitate to psychologically assault its reader.

  • Dannii Elle

    This is the third instalment in the Hannibal Lecter series.

    I might have put this book down for a whole month but then I binged through over half of it in a single day, so make of that what you will.

    I have a difficult time saying I 'enjoyed' this book, given the dark topics it focused on... but that was exactly my concluding reaction. Harris takes the readers across the globe and through a multitude of perspectives to deliver a fully-fleshed examination of Hannibal Lecter's return to the forefront of the FBIs attention. It kept me guessing and grossed out, and the insights were all brief which also ensured I kept the pages turning.

  • Chris Shepherdson

    When Thomas Harris created the infamous Hannibal Lector in Red Dragon he couldn't have known the influence that character would have on crime fiction for the next decade. By the time he came to write Hannibal, ten years after his previous book, The Silence of The Lambs, he must have felt some serious pressure. The fact that Hannibal is the book it is, when written under these circumstances, makes it all the more remarkable.
    To call it a crime novel is doing it a grave injustice and reading it as such will also leave the reader disappointed. This book sits closer to Stoker's Dracula or Shelly's Frankenstein than the serial killer fare of Michael Connelly. Treat this book more as gothic fairytale and you won't be disappointed.
    The greatest triumph of The Silence of The Lambs is, as iconic as the film version is, it scarecely registers as you read the book. You are taken into another world and any thought of Jodie Foster and Anthony Hopkins are gone. The same is true of Hannibal, and then some.

  • Darth J

    Movie, Y U NO B LIEK BOOK?!

  • Warrengent

    One of my favourite books of all time pure quality.

  • Rade

    "is it as good as Red Dragon and The Silence of the Lambs? No...this one is better." - Stephen King

    Oh put a cork in it, King. I love you but you are not being truthful at all. This book was IMO a giant turd of words. Feel free to disagree.

    For one, Lecter needs to remain a secondary character, the kind that will offer advice and feed on personal information of the people interviewing him. In this book he is featured a lot more than in other books. He is free but at the same time he is hunted and he knows exactly who is hunting him. How? No idea. If you say he got enemies, it can be said just about anyone who he saw in his office or otherwise is his enemy. He does not necessarily help people. He points them in a right direction but does not explicitly say what they should do. Most time he enjoys torturing people in any way he wants. He is like a worm burrowing in you, always itching yet you can't scratch it.

    Two, Mason. A bit of a different character (in his appearance, at least) but his plan with pigs did not interest me one bit. His Roid Rage sister also creeped me out. The whole Italian hunt was rather tedious, going on forever.

    Three, the length of this book. Clocking over 500 pages, it felt sort of mundane. If I don't care about one character story line which was 1/3 of the book, it is hard for me to love the entire book. It dragged on and I think there was bunch of things that could have eliminated altogether. At least 10 out of the 103 chapters.

    And four, Starling. Once again she is found in a situation where she acted instinctively, got the job done, and got suspended because it is against regulations or some shit. She is like one of those rogue cop characters from 80s action movies where she plays by her rules and even if she ends up saving lives, her actions are frowned upon because it seems the end NEVER justifies the means. I am still lacking words to understand her actions in the end. I did like the whole eel part though.

    Do me a favor and just skip this one. Not even close to the first two books and don't listen to King. He can suck it.

  • Bradley

    I knew it was really a love story because I had seen the movie first, but I didn't realize how much of a love story it would become. Sure, cat and mouse games were predominant, and they were satisfyingly concluded, but the true joy for me came with not only identifying with, but actively loving the title character. Clarise, on the other hand, has become a much more interesting character.
    I'm not certain how much I believe her own transformation. Sure, a person can be programmed, and I know that in her case she had always respected the good doctor, perhaps even getting a bit obsessed; but openly throwing her lot in with him the way she does? Without drugs or more hypnotherapy? A completely willing slave? This is Clarise, after all; strong-minded, brutally honest, trailer-trash Clarise. The only conclusion I have to make is that her alteration is completely of her own choosing. And that's what makes it a love story.
    The question makes it delicious, of course.

  • May 舞

    First half of the book: 3 stars
    Second half: 5 stars *THAT ENDING OH MY GOD* I'm emotionally drained

  • Madeline

    Wow! What an ending!!! I love the ambiguity of it! How we just get the final scene at Mason Verger's, where Starling rescues Hannibal and he escapes! And then the book ends right after that! With no more scenes! So we're left to imagine! How Starling works her way back into the good graces of her FBI superiors! And continues her cat-and-mouse pursuit of Hannibal Lecter! But Thomas Harris knows that it's better to leave this up to the readers' imaginations! So he has Starling save Hannibal from Mason Verger! And then that's the end! There were no more chapters!

    SO BOLD AND INNOVATIVE. FIVE STARS.

  • F

    LOVED

  • Niki

    Full review will come very soon, maybe even in a few hours. I don't need to think long and hard about this one before reviewing it.

    ...Indeed, a few hours later, here I am reviewing this book.

    First things first: I will not be putting any of the spoilers under a spoiler cut. That's because you SHOULD spoil yourself before reading this book, and spare yourself from reading it altogether.

    (Spare yourself. SAVE yourself. It's too late for me, but save yourself!!)

    Usually, I put the negative stuff I have to say about a book first in my review, because they're usually less than the positives. For this one, I'll have to write the positives first, because they're a whooping two (2). I'm talking about two scenes in particular, the eel one, and the lobotomy one. These were just the right amount of twisted, gory, and original, and they were the ONLY highlights for me in the entire book.

    "Hannibal" is overwritten. It's 500+ pages and 80% of that is purple prose and painfully long descriptions that no one asked for: forensics, one random Italian cop's family history, Italy itself, Hannibal's shopping haul, Mason's eel, Margot and Barney's workouts, Hannibal's "memory palace".... I was SO BORED reading the book. Why did it have to be so long??

    Apart from the above, there are a bunch of plot points that go absolutely nowhere. When Clarice goes back to the hospital, she finds a previous patient that was kind of close with Hannibal, and there's an entire scene about that; that goes nowhere. Margot and Barney become best buddies and Barney gets an erection for her once; that also goes nowhere and does nothing to further their character development. Ardelia Mapp tries to track down Clarice in the end; that is also mentioned once and never again. WHY?? Where was the editor for this book??

    I'm not even going to get into the butchered characterization of every single character. I'm not.

    So I slogged through the entire book patiently, because I was determined to finish it, and what do I get for my trouble? A horrible ~SHOCKINGLY TWISTING ENDING!!!!!~(TM) with Hannibal brainwashing Clarice and making her into his perfect femme fatale doll, because she obviously wasn't good enough for him before, when she was in control of herself, right??

    That's especially insulting when you see that "it's not supposed to be like that!" when Thomas Harris makes sure to mention that "Hannibal didn't succeed! She resisted and always managed to surprise him!!" WHAT? The last time Clarice Starling is in the book is when she is shot by the second dart and loses consciousness. Period. The "Clarice" that appears from then on isn't Clarice. Clarice was sacrificed so that Harris would get a SHOCKING, but also romantic, ENDING!!! (TM)

    I'd like to give a special shoutout to this part towards the end, this one:

    Their relationship has a great deal to do with the penetration of Clarice Starling, which she avidly welcomes and encourages. It has much to do with the envelopment of Hannibal Lecter, far beyond the bounds of his experience. It is possible that Clarice Starling could frighten him. Sex is a splendid structure they add to every day.

    Bear in mind that this is about a BRAINWASHED woman and the person who brainwashed her. But, even ignoring that (which is difficult to ignore anyway), it is the cringiest description of sex I've had to read in my entire life. This is even worse than the usual "fireworks" metaphor that many writers like to use.

    I read that they changed the ending in the movie version, making it far less sexist than this. GEE, I WONDER WHY.

    Final verdict: the entire "Hannibal" series isn't worth a damn, and "Hannibal" is by far the worst book.

  • Metodi Markov

    Седем години са минали от събитията в "Мълчанието на агнетата" и никой не знае нищо за благополучно изчезналия д-р Лектър. Освен, че д-р Чилтън е бил на вечеря със стар приятел и повече не е видян жив.

    Кариерата на агент Старлинг отдавна буксува и даже след неуспешна наркоакция, враговете ѝ я готвят за изкупителен агнец. (то тази част най-много ми хареса в цялата книга)

    Тогава се получава писъмце от него и всичко се объща на 180 градуса. Защото макар и позабравен, д-р Лектър има могъщи неприятели, готови на всичко за да го спипат и да си разчистят сметките с него, в една планирана виртуозно свинска вакханлия.

    Краят на историята е логичен, но на мен не ми допадна много, не така си представях развръзката на това преследване. Основен проблем според мен е, че липсва развитие на главните герои, остават замръзнали на нивото от предната книга. Пикът бе достигнат тогава и сега те само се свличат по нанадолнището...

    Ще пропусна четвъртата част, историята в нея (за детството на Лектър), някак не ми се струва достатъчно интересна.

  • Rob


    Number three in the Hannibal Lecter series.
    Really its only number two as in the first book ‘Red Dragon’ Hannibal was just an embryo waiting for his moment in the sun.

    You have to hand it to Thomas Harris when it comes to creating disgustingly vile characters he is really good at it.

    Hannibal has killed a lot of people over the years and only two survived their experience with Hannibal. One survivor, Mason Verger, now spends his days on life support machines and dreaming up ways to kill Hannibal. But only the most gruesome deaths will do for Dr. Lecter. After what Mason has gone through at the hands of Dr. Lecter you have to have some sympathy for him until, that is, you learn that he is a sadistic paedophile who when younger loved nothing better than raping his younger sister.
    Mason Verger is only one of many truly vile characters.

    The story takes place in the USA, Florence Italy and back again to the States. Every man and his dog is out looking for Hannibal. But none more franticly than the FBI and Mason Verger. For all their due diligence, Hannibal is always one step ahead and he is taking no prisoners. Well not always one step ahead.

    Clarice Starling the heroin from ‘Silence of the Lambs’ is apart of the FBI team looking for Hannibal. But what Clarice does at the end is just unimaginable.

    With all its unfettered violence it is with some guilt that I have to admit that I really enjoyed this book. There is just something about Hannibal that is totally mesmerising.

    Highly recommended for readers with strong stomachs.

    4/5 stars.

  • James

    The book starts off wonderfully with Harris's visualization; you can see everything you read. There are complex characters introduced and of course a wicked weave between them. He shows the master insanity of Hannibal with his elaborate set-ups for escape from not only Starling but from a vile creature named Verger who sets out to seek revenge on the good doctor. And you are eating this up the whole time, because it seems that Harris is once again quite the masterful story teller. But then you get to the last few chapters.
    The best way I can describe it is it seems like he took his time and thought out every little detail like it was the master term paper. But then all of a sudden he realizes he doesn't have the time needed to finish it so he rushes it and throws an ending together. It was almost like to different authors. And of the ending! And what he does with Clarice! I was put off by the whole book in a matter of a few thousand words.