Stars: 4 out of 5
Pros: Good mystery and character development
Cons: Pacing uneven overall
The Bottom Line:
His mother’s murder
Gives us chance to see Bosch grow
Character study
Delving Further into Bosch’s Past
Book 3 in the Harry Bosch series delved into a case he’d
solved before the series started. It was
an interesting book that really worked on multiple levels while showing us a
bit of Bosch’s past. The Last Coyote delves even further into
his past by reopening a case from 30 years before that had impacted him. While still entertaining, it wasn’t quite as
good as that previous book in the series.
This book is set in the spring of 1994, just after the
Northridge earthquake that hit the greater Los Angeles area. Harry’s house is one of the many casualties
of the quake, but he is refusing to acknowledge that. He’s still living in it and trying to fix it
up so it won’t be torn down even though it has been condemned. He has plenty of time to do that since he’s
been suspended from his job as a LAPD homicide detective after attacking
Lieutenant Pounds, his immediate supervisor.
But Bosch decides to
use the time to open the case that has haunted him his entire life – the murder
of his mother when he was still a boy.
His mother had been a prostitute, and no progress was ever made in the
case. Bosch gets the old records and
begins to read over what happened. But
with a case that is 30 years old, are those involved still alive? Will Bosch be able to figure out what
happened?
In some ways, this book is a character study of Bosch. After all, he is working on an old case that
impacts him greatly. We are also treated
to the sessions he is having with the department psychologist to determine if
he is fit to return to work or not.
Ironically, I got frustrated with him several times over the course of
the book. Since he is suspended, he has
to sneak around in his investigation, but at times he crosses the line and
almost becomes a bully to find out what he needs. The therapy sessions aren’t as interesting as
they could be and slow things down as well.
However, we also truly feel for Harry as the book progresses, and we get
a different picture of him by the time the book is over, so ultimately this
character study does work.
Once Bosch gets fully on the trail of the mystery, however,
the book picks up. I figured a few parts
of it out early, but there were still some twists that surprised me along the
way, yet everything made sense at the end.
We also met some great characters along the way.
While I live in the Los Angeles area now, I moved here a
year and a half after the earthquake that forms the background of this
book. I enjoyed getting to see just what
it did to the area, but in fiction. It
certainly would have been a mess to live through, and that is captured here
even though we are several months out from the actual quake when the book
opens.
I’m continue this series on audio. Dick Hill does a mostly good job with the
narration. He’s tone down some of the
invented character ticks that annoyed me in the previous books, but he still
gets over dramatic when the characters get emotional. I’m hoping that gets toned down even more as
the series moves along.
While The Last Coyote
is a step down from the previous book in the series, it is still an
entertaining story. It certainly won’t
be the last book I read in this series since I’m looking forward to see what
happens to Harry next.
And if you want to catch more of Bosch's cases, here are the Harry Bosch mysteries in order.
This review is part of this week's Friday's Forgotten Books.
I read this quite some time ago and enjoyed it. I lived in Lake Elizabeth at the time of the quake but commuted to WLA. Things were indeed messy.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Mark, for your thoughtful and balanced reviews.
Things are a mess around here most days. I can only imagine what things looked like after the quake.
DeleteI haven't been in the area since 2010. I know the traffic keeps escalating.
DeleteThis happens to be the first Bosch book I read and the one that hooked me on the series. It was odd how I happened to read it. Camping and swapped already read paperbacks with another camper and ended up with The Last Coyote. I'm now right up to date with Harry and the gang.
ReplyDeleteI have a long ways to go to be up to date on Bosch, but it's good to know I have so many great reads ahead of me.
DeleteYou do, Mark, and some big surprises too!
DeleteI love Michael Connelly books. I should read some again soon!
ReplyDeleteThis was a tough read after the first two... yikes, the therapy sessions were painful... Bosch needs a nemesis to take out this character for him like Honey Chandler from the last book...
ReplyDelete