Fans of the first two books should be forewarned. In this blockbuster sequel, Hannibal is more victim than persecutor, more pursued than pursuer. Indeed, one could even describe him as a sympathetic character. Well, almost. This shift in the reader’s sympathies is partly related to the introduction of a new character, Mason Vergare, a surviving patient/victim of Lecter’s psychiatric "treatment" who is hell-bent on revenge. Vergare is even more malevolent and more contemptible than Lecter. He lives on a respirator with one functional eye and no face to speak of. During a therapy session, Lecter apparently departed from accepted practice guidelines and instructed the patient to cut off his face and feed it to his dogs. Lacking appreciation for Lecter’s innovative therapeutic technique, Vergare has devoted his life to tracking down Lecter and feeding him alive to specially bred carnivorous pigs.