Selected Book
Every Dead Thing
- Mass Market Paperback
- Author: John Connolly
- Publisher: Pocket
- Release Date: July 2000
- ISBN-10: 067102731X
- ISBN-13: 9780671027315
- List Price: $7.99
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Summaries and Customer Reviews provided by Amazon
SummaryIt's a good idea to avoid reading John Connolly's debut novel on a full stomach. His descriptions of mutilated murder victims give him honorary membership in the gore wars club. Every Dead Thing is a fast-paced piece of fiction from an author whose regular stomping ground is as a journalist for the Irish Times. NYPD detective Charlie "Bird" Parker was busy boozing at Tom's Oak Tavern when his wife Susan, and young daughter Jennifer were mutilated by a killer called the Traveling Man. Consumed by guilt and alcoholism, Charlie soon lost his job, and almost his sanity. Several months on he is sober and ready to get his life back in order. Charlie takes up private investigating. One of his first cases involves the disappearance of a woman called Catherine Demeter. At first this puzzle seems unrelated to the Traveling Man--but Charlie has a gut feeling that the slayer is pulling the strings. "I dreamed of Catherine Demeter surrounded by darkness and flames and the bones of dead children. And I knew then that some terrible blackness had descended upon her." The search for Catherine takes Charlie on a whirlwind tour of the South. First to the small Virginian town of Haven, where, some 30 years before, Catherine's sister Amy was murdered, along with other local children. But the trail turns cold--until a tip from a psychic leads Charlie to the swamplands of Louisiana. The subplots of Catherine's disappearance, age-old child murders, and the slaying of the Parker family finally unite in the hot, humid terrain. A showdown with the Traveling Man is inevitable. Every Dead Thing is classic American crime fiction, and it's hard to believe that John Connolly was born and raised on the Emerald Isle. --Naomi Gesinger |
Customer Reviews
Average Rating:
3 and a half stars?
This book was OK...I agree with the other reviewers who have said that it was like two books in one, but for the most part the story was interesting and the characters were developed fairly well, but not great. I did get so tired of reading about what everybody was wearing, using, etc. that I began to wonder if Connolly sold ad space to some major brand names to help finance his book, it got a little ridiculous, but for the most part not too bad...if you don't agree with me, try reading Shadow Man by Cody McFadyen and you'll definitely appreciate this book A LOT more!
Boooring...
I don't want to mince words -- I hated this book. So much so that I didn't even finish it. I know, I know -- people hate it when you haven't finished a book and then review it. This is the only time I've done this.
I really didn't care WHAT happend to these people - I just wanted them gone. And what a snoozefest.
This was my first John Connolly book and my last.
Well researched, but way too dark
John Connolly did his homework before writing this novel, but it was way too dark and entirely too predictable. I had both murderers identified 1/3 of the way through the book. When I finally realized that I was correct in my suspicions about 1/2 way through the book, I stopped reading it. I hadn't been enjoying up to that point and saw no reason to continue.
Good drama
This was my first book by this author and now I will have to play catch up to his other works.
The books basically is twofold; it has two interconnecting stories which solves a 'mystery' of children being murdered. The author does a great job with his characterizations and the plot is absolutely intense.
This is a great piece of work. I highly recommend it.
Unsettling Topic
The book contains two distinct storylines. The first is a cold case that involves a series of child murders in a small, rural Virginia town, with the murderers shifting base to the New York City area in the present time. The second case begins with the disappearance of a child in the Louisiana bayou, leading to a series of graphic murders of both children and adults.
The common link in both storylines is Charlie 'Bird' Parker, a former policeman whose wife an young child were brutally murdered appoximately a year before the time set in the book.
The Louisiana story is the primary plot line, as it promises to be the one that has the most in common with the murders of Parker's family. However, I found the Virginia storyline to be the more interesting one. The Virginia story had more of an underlying evil to it, while the Louisiana story seemed to have more of a criminally insane sickness to it.
The murders in both locations are disturbing, with the Louisiana ones the more graphic. The ultimate unveiling of the culprit in Lousiana is not all that surprising as there are enough clues throughout the book for the reader to connect the dots.
In summary, this was my first Connolly book, but it won't be my last. Well done. The reader should be satisfied if the topic and graphic crime scenes don't bother.