The Lucid Spider
Charles R. Hinckley
Independently Published (2025)
ISBN: 979-8278924999
Reviewed by Demetria Head for Reader Views (02/2026)
The Lucid Spider by Charles R. Hinckley is a sci-fi crime thriller and book three in August Chase, the Psychic Detective Series. As the story opens, readers follow August “Gus” Chase, whose world is anything but normal. He confesses to his friend Mill that he’s had another dream about murder. Then he sees a vision of a red-haired woman on a subway platform who is clearly in danger. When he runs to the station, he sees the scene unfold exactly the same as his vision. By now, readers know that he’s a private investigator and a psychic. The drama that opens the story sets the tone for the unpredictable nature of the gift that Gus possesses.
I like how subtly the character development was done. Hinckley did a great job in creating August’s character with steady composure. He also has moral discipline. His development is also affected by the weight of his psychic abilities. Then there’s Jenny Lynch, who’s with law enforcement. She develops over time through gradual trust and acceptance of August’s unconventional gift. This also makes their partnership convincing. August’s friend, Mill, is the opposite and serves as the stable, conventional one. Their contrast is obvious, with Mill representing normalcy and August representing a divergence from it.
Hinckley’s style of writing reminds me of that classic detective noir with the paranormal suspense element. The pacing is brisk where there’s action, and it slows down when readers are taken inside Gus’s visions and inner conflicts. I loved the investigative scenes and the psychic insight. I was thrilled with the high tension. I also appreciated the fact that Hinckley made Gus’s psychic abilities feel more like a burden or complication that affects his work. It was done in such a way that it didn’t feel gimmicky either. I think readers will also appreciate how Hinckley made Gus’s visions fragmented at times, forcing him to rely more on traditional investigative work. It reminds us of how abilities can be fallible sometimes and can’t always control outcomes.
It also shows he’s not perfect, and he is allowed to have uncertainties, no matter how scary or tense that makes the situation. One particular scene where this uncertainty arises is surrounding the case of a missing woman, and Gus doesn’t know if she’s dead or alive. Some of the other pivotal scenes that I think did well moving the narrative forward are when the killer connected to a specific method comes to the forefront, raising the stakes, and forces Gus to confront the ongoing threat. There is a kidnapping that is thrown in the mix, several events end up interconnected, and the terror and tension just keep rising. Hinckley is very disciplined in showing those complex layers and makes them work effectively throughout the book.
Overall, The Lucid Spider unfolds a web of intrigue, pressure, danger, and reactive intervention. It is procedural and metaphysical as well. Readers will be especially satisfied with this novel. It can be compared to Dean Koontz’s Odd Thomas for how the protagonist treats his abilities more like a duty rather than a gift. This installment can stand well by itself as a character-driven paranormal mystery.
