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Nine [Hardcover]

Burke
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

21 Oct 2002
Hailed by reviewers and fellow authors alike, Edgar Award winner Jan Burke has won a legion of devoted readers with her witty, ingeniously crafted novels featuring Irene Kelly. Now Burke, who earned critical acclaim for her stunning departure novel, "Flight," returns with another electrifying thriller: "Nine" will hold readers in thrall until the breathtaking conclusion.

When a brutal felon on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list turns up dead in Los Angeles County, few mourn him; in fact, the public begins to cheer his unknown assailants as heroes. But as more brutalized corpses of fugitive outlaws are found, Sheriff's Homicide Detective Alex Brandon knows that the vigilante group the public has nicknamed "The Exterminators" may be far more ruthless and sadistic than its victims.

The corpses bear eerie similarities to victims of a serial killer investigated by Brandon ten years ago. The perpetrator died at the hands of his own deeply traumatized teenaged stepson, Kit Logan. Logan, protected by his wealthy family, never spent a day in jail; instead, he was sent to a private reform school for the truant sons of L.A.'s most affluent. Alex Brandon, unable to locate Logan for questioning, has a chilling sense he is being manipulated. But why?

A terrifying novel that asks what happens when justice is no longer enough, "Nine" introduces an unforgettable protagonist. A modern morality tale, it is another captivating gem from an acclaimed master of mystery and suspense.


Product details

  • Hardcover: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster; First Printing edition (21 Oct 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0743223896
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743223898
  • Product Dimensions: 20.8 x 14.2 x 3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 4,071,252 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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First Sentence
A black-winged bird swooped past Kit's left shoulder, and he shied away from it, crouching down low, half losing his balance. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Jan Burke never ceases to amaze 6 May 2004
Format:Hardcover
I am a big fan of the Irene Kelly series and at first was a little reticent of reading a novel by Jan Burke that did not have Irene as the main character. Luckily I discovered that my fears were completely unfounded and that the quality of this novel is as good as the rest of Burke's work, if not better.

Four young men are the main participants in a group called Project Nine, whose mission is to take justice into their own hands by killing the criminals that are listed in the FBI's Most Wanted list. The members of the group are all former Sedgewick students, which is a school well known for harboring rich kids who have had problems in various areas (school, trouble with police, etc). The murderers use a very distinct method, and detective Alex Brandon finds clear similarities with a previous case in his career. The killer in that prior case ended up being murdered by his stepson, Kit, who was only eleven years at that time.

The author not only presents a highly interesting and complex plot in terms of the reasons behind the actions of the characters, but also does an amazing job in depicting Alex and Kit, and also in intertwining elements of their personal life into the story. Each time I grab a book written by Jan Burke I find myself surprised not only by the highly entertaining stories she creates, but also by the outstanding quality of her writing. This is probably why she has won numerous prizes, including the prestigious Edgar Award. This work has convinced me: besides waiting for the next Irene Kelly novel, I will grab anything this author writes!

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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Slow and forced 21 May 2003
Format:Hardcover
Sedgewick, a reform school in Malibu for troubled rich kids, has produced Project Nine, a group of sadistic killers bent on eliminating the FBI's ten most wanted felons ... and a few other people as well. After the first three felons are found strung upside down over bathtubs, Homicide Detective Alex Brandon of the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department is assigned head of the investigation, along with his tough talking partner, Ciara -- as if they didn't have enough problems of their own already, her with her secret tragidy and he with his only nephew showing up on his doorstep in lieu of being arrested for car theft. Brandon soon notices the bodies of the victims are strickingly similar to a serial killing case he investigated ten years ago, one wrapped up when the perpetrator was killed by his own son, Kit Logan, while he was at work on his ninth victim. Kit, connected to a wealthy family, never went to jail. Instead he went to Sedgewick. But now Brandon can't get a hold of him. Does someone somewhere know too much?

Although NINE hooks the reader from page one and promises a good read, it soon fails on all counts. The plot is forced and laborious, hopping between a variety of cardboard viewpoint characters, from the too good and gorgeous Alex Brandon to the too nasty and wooden bad guys. At least three of the people in the book have green eyes (a geneticly remote possibility), and none of them can speak realisticly. The only interesting character is Brandon's uncle and surrogate father, John, retired from the LASD. A quarter of the way through this novel I stopped reading word for word, and by page 251 I was skipping whole chunks. The ending was a huge disappointment and left me hoping none of these poorly motivated paper people come back for an encore....

If you like fast, well plotted books peopled by characters with convincing motivations, this book is not for you. However, Jan Burke fans will no doubt find things to appreciate here, and should certainly give NINE a try. Read more ›

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars  22 reviews
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars nine rates the Maximum number of stars 25 Oct 2002
By b mcb - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Good character development - there's Alex, a homicide detective, with complicated family relationships. He investigates a murder where a large numeral 9 is left painted on the wall. Gripping plot -- the 9 goes on to be a 7 and 8 -- there's a serial killing in progress. What could NINE mean? Jan Burke develops great scenes showing how and why all the little individual pieces tie together into a Project Nine. A surprising twist adds to the flavor of the book.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Jan Burke never ceases to amaze 2 April 2004
By Sebastian Fernandez - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Mass Market Paperback
I am a big fan of the Irene Kelly series and at first was a little reticent of reading a novel by Jan Burke that did not have Irene as the main character. Luckily I discovered that my fears were completely unfounded and that the quality of this novel is as good as the rest of Burke's work, if not better.

Four young men are the main participants in a group called Project Nine, whose mission is to take justice into their own hands by killing the criminals that are listed in the FBI's Most Wanted list. The members of the group are all former Sedgewick students, which is a school well known for harboring rich kids who have had problems in various areas (school, trouble with police, etc). The murderers use a very distinct method, and detective Alex Brandon finds clear similarities with a previous case in his career. The killer in that prior case ended up being murdered by his stepson, Kit, who was only eleven years at that time.

The author not only presents a highly interesting and complex plot in terms of the reasons behind the actions of the characters, but also does an amazing job in depicting Alex and Kit, and also in intertwining elements of their personal life into the story. Each time I grab a book written by Jan Burke I find myself surprised not only by the highly entertaining stories she creates, but also by the outstanding quality of her writing. This is probably why she has won numerous prizes, including the prestigious Edgar Award. This work has convinced me: besides waiting for the next Irene Kelly novel, I will grab anything this author writes!

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Burke's fan base will grow thanks to this gripping thriller 8 Dec 2002
By Bookreporter - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
It happens. You start a book with high expectations for whatever reason --- the inside cover summary, a friend's recommendation or, heaven forbid, some nebbish reviewer --- and you're disappointed. The converse also happens, however. You're not expecting much when you crack the binding on the book and the next thing you know you're halfway through the story before you even think about putting it down --- kind of like being abducted by aliens, without the probes, if you will.

That's the sort of out-of-body experience I encountered when I picked up NINE by Jan Burke. I wasn't really familiar with Burke's previous work, more by accident than by design, so I approached NINE with a tabula rosa impression, an impression that is now indelibly etched into my memory. NINE is as complex and gripping a thriller as you may well read this year.

The premise of NINE revolves around an unknown perpetrator or perpetrators who are dramatically and theatrically murdering the individuals listed on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted List. The first, a drug kingpin who executed a potential witness against him, along with the witness's family, is strung up and left to die with his lifeblood draining from him. The mourners who attended this gentleman's demise could be counted on the end of one stump. The unknown individual who hastened his journey to the other side of the veil is quickly heralded as a hero. As the remaining individuals on the FBI's list are dispatched with efficient and creative rapidity, the public is enthralled. Detective Alex Brandon of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department is not among the cheerleaders, however. The executions bear an eerie resemblance to the murders carried out by a serial killer, now deceased, some ten years previous; they appear to be done for the purpose of carrying out a taunting message to Brandon. As his investigation continues, Brandon becomes more and more certain that The Executioners, as the media has dubbed them, are actually targeting him. Burke almost loses her way at the end --- the ending almost seems a bit contrived --- but she ultimately manages to pull things off, coming back in a satisfying epilogue to tidy things up quite neatly and satisfactorily.

NINE will introduce Burke fans to a whole new cast of characters. While the main focus of the book is Detective Brandon, the supporting characters are so interesting that they ultimately come close to high-jacking the book away from him. While NINE functions quite nicely as a stand-alone, independent work, it would seem a shame for Burke not to utilize Brandon and his supporting cast of characters in future novels. Whatever Burke might choose to do, however, NINE will undoubtedly bring a legion of new readers to her work.

--- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub

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