Hidden River
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
Gerard Doyle compels the listener into the midst of this gritty thriller, which originates in Northern Ireland, where an ex-detective embarks on an errand to investigate the murder of a former girlfriend--in Colorado. Doyle is brilliant with the Irish accents, handling also Americans and others. He's far beyond a solid competency, achieving skilled psychological shadings that inform and color all the characters, even the Americans. Trouble follows Alex and his friend John as they get embroiled in their own crimes and match wits with Denver detective Redhorse. The first-person narrative flows with natural storytelling. Doyle takes every advantage of this taut suspense, making it seem effortless. Listeners will be riveted. R.F.W. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award 2006 Audie Award Finalist (c) AudioFile 2005, Portland, Maine
Starred review from December 6, 2004
Irish author McKinty follows up 2003's acclaimed Dead I May Well Be
with an outstanding and complex crime novel that should appeal to fans of hard-boiled Celtic scribes such as Ken Bruen and Ian Rankin. Alexander Lawson, a down-and-out ex-cop with a heroin habit, had been a rising homicide detective in Belfast's Royal Ulster Constabulary when he was abruptly transferred to the drug squad. He soon gets caught stealing heroin from an evidence locker and resigns in disgrace. A Scotland Yard cop named Douglas, convinced that the story doesn't fit, vows to discover the truth. Then, in Denver, an old girlfriend of Lawson's, Victoria Patawasti, winds up dead. After the slain girl's father receives an anonymous tip that the police have arrested the wrong man, he persuades Lawson to investigate. In the States, Lawson's first stop is the nonprofit environmental agency where Victoria worked. He finds that she discovered major discrepancies in the agency's banking accounts, and suspects that got her killed. Lawson goes undercover, taking a fund-raising job at CAW (Campaign for the American Wilderness), where he gets an inside look at slick owner Charles Mulholland and an even closer look at his wife, Amber, a beautiful young seductress. As the action intensifies, Lawson comes up against a deeper, hidden case. This is not only an expertly crafted suspense novel but also a revealing study of addiction. Agent, Bob Mecoy. (Jan. 11)
Forecast:
A blurb from Frank McCourt will help lure readers of literary Irish fiction who don't normally touch crime fiction. The moody Denver skyline on the jacket is also a plus.
April 4, 2005
Doyle's reading of McKinty's third novel (after Dead I May Well Be
) seems awkward initially. The Irish-brogued narrator reads the text the way a poet would for a public reading: in short spurts, withholding emotion and allowing the words to have their own weight. Needless to say, this is an odd approach for a crime thriller. However, listeners soon learn that the narrator is the protagonist—junkie Alexander Lawson, a former detective for Northern Ireland's police force—and somehow, Doyle's narrative stylings start to make sense. Intelligent and wry, Lawson is a junkie for practical reasons. As a detective, he discovered corruption in the force at a level so high that his life was endangered, so he decided to become an unreliable source, an addict whose word counted for nothing. His plan seems to be working, until an outside investigator threatens to throw him in jail if he doesn't give up the names of his corrupt superiors. With pressure building on both sides, he jumps at the opportunity to go to Colorado to solve an old girlfriend's murder. By the time listeners reach disc two, they'll be hooked by both McKinty's skillfully woven suspense and Doyle's almost endearing interpretation of this memorable protagonist. Simultaneous release with the Scribner hardcover (Forecasts, Dec. 6, 2004).
September 15, 2004
By the author of the crime thriller debut Dead I May Well Be: former detective Alexander Lawson of Northern Ireland must investigate the murder of a long-lost love. Simultaneous with the Scribner hardcover; read by Gerard Doyle. nonfiction
Copyright 2004 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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