by Ron Corbett ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 23, 2018
Frigid North Shore landscapes, kitchen-sink plotting, and a dogged investigator who doesn’t know when or how to quit. Even...
A second case for Frank Yakabuski, senior detective with Canada’s Springfield Regional Police Force, entangles him in gang warfare, kidnapping, murder, and theft on a grand scale.
Even in death, Augustus Morrissey, King of the Shiners, is just one surprise after another. Most gang leaders, no matter how many enemies they make, don’t get beaten and stabbed to death, have their eyes cut out—a technique long associated with the rival Travellers, led by Gabriel Dumont—and get tied to a fence in full view of a housing project in which nobody bothers to call the police. And of course very few corpses have a diamond worth over $1 million shoved down their throats. There’s every indication that the diamond in question came from the De Kirk Mines even though De Kirk general manager Peter Merkel smugly maintains that his security measures put theft out of the question. When Yakabuski (Ragged Lake, 2017) tracks down long-missing Terry Maguire and offers to get his grandson, teenage meth head Jimmy O’Driscoll, into a top rehab program and shield him from the Popeyes motorcycle gang, who want him to pay what he owes them or else, Maguire indicates that he does indeed know who killed Augustus Morrissey but that he won’t tell. Instead, he assures Yakabuski that he’ll find all the answers he needs if he can only locate Katherine Morrissey, the mother of Sean Morrissey, the King’s son and heir apparent. Katherine Morrissey proves even more elusive than Maguire, who was declared dead 14 years ago. And that’s tough on everyone, because an all-out gang war between the Shiners and the Travellers erupts while Yakabuski is still looking for her.
Frigid North Shore landscapes, kitchen-sink plotting, and a dogged investigator who doesn’t know when or how to quit. Even though this is only his second outing, somebody definitely owes Corbett’s hero a vacation.Pub Date: Oct. 23, 2018
ISBN: 978-1-77041-395-5
Page Count: 336
Publisher: ECW Press
Review Posted Online: July 30, 2018
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2018
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by Ace Atkins ‧ RELEASE DATE: Nov. 19, 2019
Readers who’ve always wanted to see Spenser in Tinseltown can cross that off their bucket lists.
Spenser goes to Hollywood.
In the two years since she’s moved from Cambridge to Los Angeles in pursuit of stardom, Gabrielle Leggett has been a dog walker, a personal assistant, a model, an actress, a media influencer, and now, for the past two weeks, a missing person. The LAPD knows about Gabby’s disappearance, but her mother, dissatisfied with their efforts, sends Spenser (Robert B. Parker’s Old Black Magic, 2018, etc.) out to the Left Coast to do the job right. Predictably, Gabby’s agent and former romantic partner, Eric Collinson, doesn’t want to talk to him. Neither does Jeffrey Bloom, the acting coach who thought Gabby had just dropped out of his class, or Jimmy Yamashiro, the married studio CEO who took Collinson’s place. And the only thing publicist Nancy Sharp, Gabby’s ex-boss, wants to talk about is how much fun she and Spenser could have if he’d only lighten up. Eventually Spenser works his contacts to get an audience with Yamashiro, but the results are less than impressive. He must be making an impression, though, because five Armenian thugs ambush him and shoot his West Coast associate, Zebulun Sixkill, in the arm, disabling him and requiring Spenser to look for another sidekick. Eventually he gets a lead that connects Gabby to Joseph Haldorn, aka Phaethon, the founder of HELIOS, a hush-hush organization that promises self-actualization and conducts itself suspiciously like a cult. But instead of thickening, the mystery surrounding Gabby just gets more violent and diffuse. Surprisingly, Atkins gets the hardest parts right—his hero/narrator now sounds indistinguishable from Robert B. Parker’s—but bogs down in the plotting, the area in which he presumably had the freest hand. As for the cod-out-of-water milieu, it evokes not so much particular SoCal locations as dozens of earlier SoCal whodunits.
Readers who’ve always wanted to see Spenser in Tinseltown can cross that off their bucket lists.Pub Date: Nov. 19, 2019
ISBN: 978-0-525-53682-6
Page Count: 320
Publisher: Putnam
Review Posted Online: Sept. 14, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 2019
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by Michael Connelly ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 18, 2017
More perhaps than any of Connelly’s much-honored other titles, this one reveals why his procedurals are the most soulful in...
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The 30th novel by the creator of Harry Bosch (The Wrong Side of Goodbye, 2016, etc.) and the Lincoln Lawyer (The Gods of Guilt, 2013, etc.) introduces an LAPD detective fighting doggedly for justice for herself and a wide array of victims.
Ever since her partner, Detective Ken Chastain, failed to back up her sexual harassment claim against Lt. Robert Olivas, her supervisor at the Robbery Homicide Division, Renée Ballard has been banished to the midnight shift—the late show. She’s kept her chin down and worked her cases, most of which are routinely passed on to the day shifts, without complaints or recriminations. But that all ends the night she and Detective John Jenkins, the partner who’s running on empty, are called to The Dancers, a nightclub where five people have been shot dead. Three of them—a bookie, a drug dealer, and a rumored mob enforcer—are no great loss, but Ballard can’t forget Cynthia Haddel, the young woman serving drinks while she waited for her acting career to take off. The case naturally falls to Olivas, who humiliatingly shunts Ballard aside. But she persists in following leads during her time off even though she’d already caught another case earlier the same night, the brutal assault on Ramona Ramone, ne Ramón Gutierrez, a trans hooker beaten nearly to death who mumbles something about “the upside-down house” before lapsing into a coma. Despite, or because of, the flak she gets from across the LAPD, Ballard soldiers on, horrified but energized when Chastain is gunned down only a few hours after she tells him off for the way he let her down two years ago. She’ll run into layers of interference, get kidnapped herself, expose a leak in the department, kill a man, and find some wholly unexpected allies before she claps the cuffs on the killer in a richly satisfying conclusion.
More perhaps than any of Connelly’s much-honored other titles, this one reveals why his procedurals are the most soulful in the business: because he finds the soul in the smallest details, faithfully executed.Pub Date: July 18, 2017
ISBN: 978-0-316-22598-4
Page Count: 400
Publisher: Little, Brown
Review Posted Online: June 19, 2017
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2017
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