Cons: Definitely not a cozy; for audio version, the
narration
The Bottom Line:
Bosch must face his past
With court case tied to new case
Third in series shines
Past is Prologue
When I listened to the first book in Michael Connelly’s
Harry Bosch series, I was surprised at the major stories in his background that
effected who he was. It almost felt like
jumping into the middle of a series even though I knew it wasn’t. Now, with The Concrete Blonde, the third in the series, we get to revisit some of that
history.
Four years ago, Harry Bosch shot a man in the line of
duty. The man was a suspected serial
killer dubbed the Dollmaker, and, despite warnings to freeze, he was reaching
for something under a pillow. Now, the
man’s widow is suing Bosch and the LAPD in his wrongful death. The trial is getting publicity in the wake of
the Rodney King trial and riots.
However, the LAPD has just been sent a note that appears to
be from the Dollmaker. It teases the
location of another body, and Harry quickly recognizes all the signatures of
the killer. Did he shoot the wrong
man? Is this a copycat or a
partner? How will this affect the trial?
While this is only my third Harry Bosch book, I have already
listened to all of Michael Connelly’s Mickey Haller books. Those are legal thrillers, and we spend as
much time on the back and forth in the courtroom as anything else. I bring that up here because we spend plenty
of time in the courtroom as Harry up against a strong lawyer who wants to win
money for her client. Those scenes, as
always, were fascinating to me, and it’s interesting to see this early look at
author Michael Connelly doing it so well.
The other part of the book is police procedural, which is
what you’d expect for a police detective.
During the evenings, Bosch is out working hard to figure out what is
going on with this new body. That part
of the book was just as fascinating to me.
I thought I had the case wrapped up way before Bosch, but it turned out
I was dead wrong on who the bad person was.
The climax was brilliant and left me cheering.
This is the first time I felt like we saw some real
character growth from Bosch. Because of
his ongoing relationship with a woman he met in the last book, he’s actually
coming out of his loner shell. I
appreciated that, and I look forward to seeing more growth in future
books. The rest of the cast was also strong. We got to see different sides of some of the
regulars, which I appreciated, and the new characters held their own with this
impressive cast.
I do want to make one thing perfectly clear. This is NOT remotely one of the cozies I
normally read. There is a lot of
language (which I know is realistic but I still felt went a little overboard)
and some violence. The serial killer in
question sexually abused the women before he killed them, so some of the detail
they get into is quite uncomfortable. Some
of the victims are prostitutes, so we get a glimpse of what that does to the
women. While I do recommend the book,
keep that in mind before you pick it up.
As mentioned before, I once again listened to the audio
version of the book. The narrator is
Dick Hill, and I must say I liked the book despite his performance. All three of the books I’ve listened to that
he’s done he’s gone out of his way to be overdramatic, giving us the sighs and
coughs that are included in the narration but are out of place in an audio
book. Then there are the ticks he gives a
couple minor character’s speech for no reason I can find that makes it hard to
listen to. Finally, there is a note to
Bosch that he reads in a way that made me scratch my head. Fortunately, as the book went along, he toned
his overdramatic narration down. I’ve
always said that a narrator can make or break a book, and, while his narration
doesn’t prove that, it certainly shows how influential it can be.
With his third book, Michael Connelly is clearly finding
what works best for him in his novels. The Concrete Blonde is the best of the
first three Bosch novels. I can’t wait
to see where the series goes next from this foundation.
If, like me, you are hooked on these books, you'll want to read the rest of the Harry Bosch mysteries in order.
This review is part of this week's Friday's Forgotten Books.
This review is part of this week's Friday's Forgotten Books.
As I mentioned at Goodreads, I love this series. I am up to 2010 across all Connelly's series. I just checked the ratings I gave them and every single one is a five star with no exceptions. I'm pretty sure this is the only series I follow that has this distinction. Even the Preston/Child combo has let me down a number of times - but not Connelly! Dagny
ReplyDeleteI haven't felt they were all 5 stars, but they are definitely great. He's a talented author for sure.
DeleteP. S. You'll find out a lot more of Harry's backstory in The Last Coyote which is up next for you. It's actually the first book by Connelly that I read and the one that started me reading it. Pure luck too. I was camping and a guy a campsite or so over was also a reader. We swapped books that we'd finished and I was fortunate enough to get The Last Coyote.
ReplyDeleteMore backstory next book? Looking forward to it.
DeleteI can't get the song, Joey by Concrete Blonde out of my head.... LOL
ReplyDeleteAs for the book itself, you say it has excessive language and violence, and frankly, that's exactly what I like. :-) I think I might have to find this series, but book 1.
Sounds like it is right up your ally in that case.
Delete