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The Narrows
 
 

The Narrows [Kindle Edition]

Michael Connelly
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (42 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Sequels are all about expectations fulfilled: The Narrows is at once a new novel about Michael Connolly's series hero Harry Bosch, cop turned private eye, and a sequel to The Poet, his most highly regarded stand-alone thriller. Harry is investigating the death of Terry McCaleb--the former FBI man who dominated in Blood Work; Rachel Walling has been recalled from administrative exile when the Poet, her former boss Backus, starts killing again and sending taunts intended for her and McCaleb (who he also trained).

Connolly is very good on the psychology of investigation and on the essential voyeurism involved in contemplating someone else's mental processes. This is a book with a strong sense of place--Connolly can find menace anywhere from the desert of Nevada to the half-hidden dangerous LA river that gives the book its evocative title. If the book has a weakness, it is in the personal interactions of the two detectives--both Harry and Rachel act according to scripts we know well from previous adventures. Nevertheless, The Narrows is one of America's major thriller writers at the top of his game.--Roz Kaveney

Review

'Satisfying and creepy mystery.' SUNDAY TIMES

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 618 KB
  • Print Length: 428 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0316155306
  • Publisher: Orion (23 Dec 2009)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B0037471WG
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (42 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #2,768 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
12 of 13 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Firstly, an important announcement concerning THE NARROWS, the book contains crucial spoilers for those who have not yet read THE POET. If you were planning on reading THE POET, do so before picking this book up. In my opinion, failing to do so will ruin both books.

The Poet is active again. The brilliant but deranged serial killer who somehow escaped in Michael Connelly's award-winning book THE POET has left the FBI the location of his killing field. He also leaves a note inviting Rachel Walling, his FBI combatant in the earlier book, to come and catch him. Since The Poet disappeared Rachel has been posted to the Dakotas as a form of FBI punishment for her failures, but she answers the call and heads straight for the Nevada desert where ten bodies are being exhumed. Joining her, in a round about sort of way is Harry Bosch, who happens to stumble into the investigation, but naturally, runs rings around the FBI.

Their partnership is an uneasy one. Bosch suspects that Rachel has been ordered by her superior to keep an eye on him and this is how she has decided to do it, Rachel knows that Bosch isn't telling her everything he knows about the case. And they're both pretty certain that The Poet is luring them into a trap that he will spring at a time of his choosing. It's a chase that will take them from Las Vegas all the way back to Harry's home turf in Los Angeles.

Michael Connelly has written a celebration of past books by joining together characters from his different series and stand-alones. This isn't the first time he has done this, having already brought together Harry Bosch and Terry McCaleb in A DARKNESS MORE THAN NIGHT.

This is certainly not the most compelling book in the Harry Bosch series, but to give it its dues, the detective work was clever and insightful. Where it fell down for me was in the pacing. It drifts along for an inordinate length of time before there was any real interaction between the killer and the protagonists. In place of the head-to-head confrontations between Harry Bosch and The Poet, the story was taken up with Bosch butting heads with the FBI. While this was entertaining to begin with, its continuation became irritating because it impeded the flow of the story.

THE NARROWS never really delivers on the promises it makes through the knowledge that a heartless killer is out there possibly hunting the hunters. Comparing it to a couple of the books from which the characters were taken, I thought THE POET was a more face-paced thriller that contained much edgier drama, while the previous Harry Bosch book LOST LIGHT gave us a more introspective analysis of the Bosch persona, which epitomises the Harry Bosch series, while also providing a heart-pounding thriller.

An unusual but effective feature employed by Connelly was to shift from a first person narrative to a third person description from chapter to chapter. Whenever Bosch too the scene, it was told from his perspective, but Connelly gave himself the freedom to describe events outside of Bosch's realm too.

It's a good thing I'm just wild about Harry or I'd be wondering what all the fuss was about. Although it was a treat to have the interwoven characters and past storylines joined, I felt the story fell a little flat.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
As readable as always 16 Aug 2007
By johnverp TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
On this occasion, Bosch, now as a PI, teams up with a female FBI agent who is not flavour of the month at the Bureau. She is in the middle of things as a likely target for her former boss who has gone bad. Bosch, on the other hand, is investigating the suspected murder of a former agent who was a friend of his, at the request of the agent's wife. The threads soon become one.

This is a typically good Connelly novel with a well-constructed plot. A lot of it is about gathering or interpreting clues and catching up with the bad guy.

There is nothing particularly stylish about Connelly's writing here, but his characterisations are good and he knows how to build a story and keep your mind interested and guessing.

If you've read the prequel and are interested in this follow-up, take care with one of the reviews below - something you may not wish to know about yet is accidentally revealed.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful
By T. D. Welsh TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
First the good news: this is another fine Harry Bosch detective thriller, and I thoroughly enjoyed reading it. In fact I found myself sitting up late to read the last third, because I just had to know the outcome. Connelly pulls together a large cast of characters: Bosch himself, one or two of his old police colleagues, the FBI - including Rachel Walling, the agent who shot the Poet - and the family of retired FBI agent Terry McCaleb. In a way, this is what causes the book's main problem: although good, it could have been still better. The first two thirds of "The Narrows" consists of a sustained build-up of tension, which arouses very high expectations. The relatively straightforward denouement feels like a letdown, but only relative to the terrific excitement that Connelly generates.

There are a few interesting technical touches. Authors usually write in either the first person or the third person throughout. Here, Connelly makes Bosch the narrator, but cuts in and out with third-person views on the rest of the cast. To my surprise, he succeeds in making it work pretty well. He also gets away with mentioning the film of "Blood Work", and having a character read "The Poet". At one stage, Harry even feels "the wire in the blood".

I think Connelly is more interested in, and perhaps better informed about, police work than the psychology of serial killers. The Poet is scary, yes: but in a matter-of-fact way, whereas some of Thomas Harris', Mo Hayder's or Val McDermid's murderers inspire feelings of genuine terror.

Bottom line: I, too, got this book as a Father's Day gift, but if I hadn't I would have been happy to buy it in hardback. That's not something I could say of many authors.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
The Narrows
Having recently discovered Michael Connelly as an author I am compulsively reading his titles. This follow up to 'The Poet' [another wonderful read] returns former FBI agent... Read more
Published 11 months ago by Romy W
garrote to the throat
have been reading connely for a long time. did not anticipate this level of character depth and plot flow. Read more
Published 17 months ago by Mr. S. Hampton
Narrow on interest
Oh dear. The first Michael Connelly book that I seriously thought about chucking out of the window. Well, after a string of 5 star books it had to happen and this is, for me so... Read more
Published on 19 Sep 2009 by Sam Quixote
The Straight And Narrow Of It All
After finishing The Narrows, I realized it was the 16th book I had ready by Michael Connelly which means I have read more books by this author than any other. Read more
Published on 23 Aug 2009 by Nancy Martin
A crime thriller masterpiece! A vintage return for Mr Connelly
The Narrows is everything you could want from a book, especially a Michael Connelly book. Sequel to The Poet, considered to be his greatest work, The Narrows is close to... Read more
Published on 21 Jan 2009 by Mr. D. J. Sutton
The Poet: Part Two
When THE POET was published in 1996 it was treated as a one-off, a standalone thriller, but eight years later Connelly has decided to resurrect the character of former FBI agent... Read more
Published on 16 Oct 2008 by OEJ
Getting Away with Murder . . . But Craving an Audience
I find mysteries about clever serial killers to be especially satisfying. The sub-genre often features a killer who is stalking the police, and that's exactly what happens in The... Read more
Published on 1 July 2008 by Donald Mitchell
Getting Away with Murder . . . But Craving an Audience
I find mysteries about clever serial killers to be especially satisfying. The sub-genre often features a killer who is stalking the police, and that's exactly what happens in The... Read more
Published on 1 July 2008 by Donald Mitchell
Solid stuff
Again another solid read from Connelly. He likes to bring his characters together from previous books and here we get Bosch investigating the death of ex-FBI and heart transplant... Read more
Published on 29 Jun 2008 by Clive
Good on its own but Connelly has become very formulaic
Firstly let me say that I like Michael Connelly's work overall. At first I thought he was a bit James Ellroy-lite, but he is a good plotter and judge of pace, and I always feel... Read more
Published on 14 Jun 2008 by Mr. S. J. Calder
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