Selected Product: | A Darkness More Than Night Hardcover Author: Michael Connelly Publisher: Little Brown Release Date: December 2000 ISBN-10: B0000AA9JB Average Customer Rating: | | Angels Flight (Harry Bosch) ISBN-10: 0446607274 ISBN-13: 9780446607278 List Price:$7.99 Trunk Music (Harry Bosch Novels) ISBN-10: 0312941919 ISBN-13: 9780312941918 List Price:$7.99 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for A Darkness More Than Night by Michael Connelly (ISBN-10: B0000AA9JB, ISBN-13: 0). At this time we have not yet written a review for A Darkness More Than Night by Michael Connelly (ISBN-10: B0000AA9JB, ISBN-13: 0). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Former FBI agent Terry McCaleb is asked by an old LAPD pal to help on a baffling murder case, the ritualistic details of which suggest a serial killer. It doesn't take him long to focus in on a prime suspect: LAPD detective Harry Bosch. Not only did Bosch carry a grudge against the dead man, a murderer who narrowly escaped prison six years before, but also clues at the death scene implicate the detective. While McCaleb investigates, Bosch is busy with his own case, helping prosecutors convict David Storey, a well-known Hollywood director accused of strangling a starlet. McCaleb eventually begins to wonder if the two cases are connected. Did Bosch cross over to the dark side or is he being framed? "... extraordinary excursion into good, evil, and the labyrinth of human motives...Bosch fan or McCaleb fan, you can't lose with this chilling tour de force." (Kirkus Reviews) Up Your Alley? | Customer Rating: | I thoroughly enjoy every Michael Connelly book I read. His plots are always complex and satisfying, his characters always engaging. A DARKNESS MORE THAN NIGHT is no exception. It's like a Connelly reunion book. Terry McCaleb, Harry Bosch, Jack McEvoy (each the star of at least one previous Connelly title) along with lesser lights such as Jaye Winston, are all brought together here in a fascinating case.
Things get rolling when Winston asks McCaleb to help her profile the killer in a case she's working on. Though reluctant at first, McCaleb finds himself hooked once he gets involved. Bosch, meanwhile, is the main prosecution witness against a Hollywood sleaze-ball accused of murdering a young actress during a sexual encounter. The two parallel plots begin to mesh when McCaleb uncovers evidence that makes Bosch a suspect. If McCaleb's suspicions become public, Bosch's effectiveness as a witness will be decisively compromised.
A DARKNESS MORE THAN NIGHT is another great read from Michael Connelly. I enjoyed it from start to finish and I think most other readers will, too. If you are a fan of Connelly, or just like reading a good police procedural, this should be right up your alley. | water damaged | Customer Rating: | | This book arrived on time but was almost unable to be opened because of water damage. | Mixed Bag | Customer Rating: | | I just discovered Michael Connelly and while I have really enjoyed his other books this is my least favorite so far. Parts of it are incredibly entertaining and it is interesting to view Bosch through the eyes of another character (McCaleb) and the idea of weaving together two murder cases is good, but, for me, the story gets a bogged down by both the solving of the two cases and the courtroom scenes. Reading so-called "courtroom drama" for me is incredibly boring. Apart from some clever word-play and maybe a "gotcha" moment, it's mostly just hot air...no action, no enjoyable writing, very little character development. Still, this doesn't deter me from wanting to read all of Connelly's books b/c those moments with the dark-hearted Bosch are worth it. | Cleaning Out the Monsters, Anyway He Can | Customer Rating: | Modern noir doesn't get any better than A Darkness More Than Night, as Michael Connelly delicately creates a full literary development of personality of his avenging detective character, Harry Bosch, while accurately portraying ordinary peace officers as the frail humans that they really are. Those who realize that FBI profiling of serial killers is more pseudo-science than science will be amused by Terry McCaleb's misreading of the clues he's given to inspect.
Those who like a novel's progress to be very opaque won't like this book. You'll see where it's headed pretty early on. The pleasure in this plot is to see if the good guys can outmaneuver some very obnoxious bad guys.
I was impressed the way the plot's design cross-cut between police investigations and a trial. I did find that Mr. Connelly's portrayal of what prosecutors do to be more than a little stilted. Janis Langwiser, co-prosecutor, is more incompetent than any first year law student I can imagine.
Those who are familiar with Mr. Connelly's earlier works will be impressed by how smoothly he combines characters and references from several books. Robert Parker could take a lesson from Mr. Connelly in this area. If you don't know the earlier books, you'll still have a fine time with the story . . . the references are well explained before the book's end.
If you like this book, you'll want to be sure to read The Narrows (Harry Bosch). | Connections, contrasts and darkness cloak the answers | Customer Rating: | (review is of the 2001 Warner Books edition) We re-visit a lot of old friends in this interesting mystery, full of twists and turns. Terry McCaleb (last seen in Blood Work), who is a retired FBI profiler, is contacted by Jay Winston for help on a case. She wants him to do a profile for her. At first he refuses, but he finally relents and agrees to do the profile. However, he ends up being pulled into the case and discovers that there appears to be a link between the murder Winston is investigating (the murder is of Edward Gunn, previously investigated by Bosch in an earlier book - unfortunately I can't remember which book at this time) and a Netherlandish artist ... named Hieronymus Bosch.
At the same time, Bosch is helping prosecute a trial against a rich Hollywood bloodsucker named David Storey, who is under arrest for strangling at least one woman to death. When it is anonymously leaked to investigative reporter Jack McEvoy (last seen in The Poet) that Bosch is possibly under investigation in the murder of Gunn, Bosch is furious - first that he would be suspected at all, and secondly because if it were to get out it would destroy his credence in court and allow Storey to go free.
The two intertwining yet apparently separate plot-lines turn and twist around each other until finally they reach a conclusion that is, to put it mildly, quite explosive.
Great book, great story! Don't miss it! |
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