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Bad Men
 
 

Bad Men (Paperback)

by John Connolly (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
RRP: £7.99
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Product details

  • Paperback: 544 pages
  • Publisher: Coronet; New edition edition (15 Mar 2004)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0340826193
  • ISBN-13: 978-0340826195
  • Product Dimensions: 17.6 x 11 x 3.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 42,287 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in this category:

    #15 in  Books > Fiction > Authors, A-Z > C > Connolly, John

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

John Connolly writes dark, streetwise thrillers that pull no punches when showing human cruelty. Bad Men blends noir crime with supernatural horror as murderous gangsters invade an island whose ghosts have a special way with bad men.

Dutch Island, once known as Sanctuary, lies off the coast of Connolly's regular stamping-ground, the US state of Maine. A gory prologue relates dreadful doings there in 1693. Now it's a sleepy, only slightly spooky haven, easily policed by a single cop--the literally giant-sized "Melancholy Joe" Dupree--plus a mainland deputy.

Joe knows something of Sanctuary's history and the forces that seem to cleanse it of toxic human elements. Following two deaths in a tragic car crash, the old ghosts seem restless, as though waiting for something. They're waiting for a man called Moloch.

Moloch, amoral and appalling, is doing time as a major criminal organiser. His beautiful, cruelly treated wife Marian took her chance to cut loose before Moloch killed her, betraying him to the police and escaping to Dutch Island with their son, a brand-new identity and a small fortune in cash.

When Moloch's team of picked killers seizes a long-awaited opportunity to free him, reunion with his wife is the next priority. Working their way through her friends, relatives and contacts, they leave a chilling trail of death and mutilation. The emotionless assassin Shepherd is bad enough, but irascible Tell has a hair-trigger temper and kills unnecessarily (eg: a bystander talking too loudly on his mobile phone), while the eerily beautiful young man Willard does it lingeringly and for fun. Even Moloch, who coldly and effortlessly dominates this awful crew, is unnerved by Willard.

When all these (and more) reach Sanctuary, a freak snowstorm rages, power and communications fail, and unknowing locals standing between the hitmen and Marian are easy meat. Two quick bullets should deal with Joe Dupree and his current deputy, a female rookie cop from Portland. But something else, as we know from many portents and Moloch's own dreams, is waiting.

Bad Men is a standalone novel despite the brief, superfluous appearance of Connolly's regular PI character Charles Parker. It's a suspenseful, compelling read, hypnotic in its orchestration of brutality and mayhem; readers are likely to wince frequently and even involuntarily shut their eyes. --David Langford --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

'Bad Men is thoughtful, dark and absolutely addictive' -- Irish Times 'John Connolly writes like an angel, but about evil men and their diabolical deeds... Written with some style and by a man completely at ease with his work, Bad Men is probably John Connolly's best novel yet. It is five-star chill with enough menace to keep the pages turning well into the wee small hours.' -- Irish Times 'Will the film version be directed by John Carpenter or Quentin Tarantino? ... Connolly spins his gruesome yarn with relish' -- Mail on Sunday 'a unique blend of crime and horror' -- Crime Time 'In the crowded killing fields of crime fiction, John Connolly has quickly and decisively established himself as a unique voice. With BAD MEN he does it again, giving us a powerful story that is dark, daring and original. This one is his best.' -- Michael Connelly 'Think Thomas Harris by way of Stephen King: haunting, compelling, but not for the faint of heart.' -- Publishers Weekly 'Connolly writes like a poet ... A stylish darkness sucks you under.' -- Kirkus Reviews 20040201

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Customer Reviews

24 Reviews
5 star:
 (9)
4 star:
 (5)
3 star:
 (7)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (24 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good enough, but not as great as Parker..., 3 Mar 2004
By RachelWalker "RachelW" (England) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)   
Bad men are coming to the island of Sanctuary. Bad men, led by the vicious Moloch, are coming, to seek out and punish Rita, his wife, who before running away to hide from him on the quiet, insular island, stole two important things from Moloch: his son and a substantial amount of cash.

Sanctuary has a bloody history; in 1693 a group of settlers on the island were betrayed to their enemies and slaughtered. Since then, the island has rested in three hundred years of peace. But, now the Bad Men are coming, the Bad Men with their malintent, and strange things are starting to happen on Sanctuary. The inhabitants can sense them, sense the changes. The island is waking once more. It is restless, and it will not tolerate the shedding of blood any longer. And still, the Bad Men are coming.

Clearly, this supernatural novel is a departure from Connolly’s normal work. But is it? Well, actually, not really. His books have always been smattered with supernatural happenings among the violence, ghostly goings-on, and they have worked to brilliant atmospheric effect in his Charlie Parker novels. However, this one is a full-blown supernatural thriller. He takes the horror and mystical elements and puts them all in one book. Obviously it is a risk for any author to depart from their norm. The important question is: does it work? The answer, mostly anyway, is yes.

Without any doubt, Connolly writes with lyrical brilliance, as exemplified marvellously by the opening to this book: “Moloch dreams. In the darkness of a Virginia prison cell, he stirs like an old demon goaded by memories of its lost humanity,” and nothing can take that away from him. Bad Men is a pleasure if only for the ethereal, vivid prose which bathes the descriptions in a sunset-like glow. It is also a pleasure for the presence of Melancholy Joe Dupree, the giant policeman who guards the island. He is a masterpiece of a character: gentle, damaged by the isolation caused by his physical difference, lonely, and yet prepared to go to great lengths of violence to do his duty, he will not be forgotten easily once the book is put down. The other characters, though, are nothing really special. Adequate, oh yes.

The supernatural elements, too, are merely adequate. Personally, sometimes I felt that they actually took away from the power of the story in some instances. In others, though, the horror and supernatural influences do create a brilliant eerie atmosphere and some excellent paths for the story, and the haunting recurring image of those grey moths is not going to leave me for some distinct while.

For those that lament the fact that this isn’t a Parker book, he does make a brief appearance, even though I know that that is no real consolation. He will return. And, I am sure that as Connolly stretches his literary wings in this fashion, he will be back all the better for it. If nothing else, this book will allow Connolly to grow and develop as a writer, which can only be to the benefit of his series. In the meantime, pick up Bad Men and enjoy. It’s not excellent, but it’s adequate, and the electrifying show-down finale is undeniably thrilling reading. Bad Men is just about worth its money.

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars a major disappointment, 10 Jun 2003
This review is from: Bad Men (Hardcover)
i'm not disappointed by this book because its not a charlie parker book. (amazingly he does appear briefly - but why?)i'm disappointed because its such a comedown from the gripping visceral tension created in his previous works. parker is a conflicted hero that we can almost identify with (as far as we ever can with someone who kills readily and suffers from visions of his murdered wife and daughter) we care about what happens to him and his friends. at no time was i remotely drawn to any of the charaters in bad men, not even the token oddball sheriff, melancholy joe. connolly's symbols here are wielded awkwardly, the handicapped boy who sees clearer than other 'able' people on sanctuary, the woman on the run from her evil husband with the demonic surname, the rookie cop trying to do her best, and by the book etc etc. it all seems a little hackneyed. there are several similarities with connolly's other books: the american north-west as a back drop, the grisly consequences of crimes long past come back to haunt, and the second sight 'enjoyed' by a number of the protaganists. don't get me wrong, i love connolly's writing. his previous books have been read and reread in this household until the covers are falling off. i waited and waited for this book to come out and i've devoured it in a day, but that spark is just not there. it reminds me of some of the episodic holiday reading that passes a few days by the pool but that is forgotten by the flight home. a bit like dean koontz, i suppose. its still a good book, but the whole moths/ghosts that can kill/bad guys only in peril concept is unworthy of connolly's obvious brilliance. i understand why he wanted to take a break from parker and rachel etc, but that's the world he really convinces me with and i hope he returns sooner, rather than later.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Master Storyteller, 13 April 2003
By Jennifer Jordan (United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Bad Men (Hardcover)
Moloch dreams. Horrible dreams. A seed of evil dwells within his soul and when he opens his eyes, it begins to grow. The feeling instilled in me within the first few lines was a need to read until the end because I didn’t want his dreams to become my own. And that’s the effect Connolly’s books always have on me. The tremendous descriptive quality of his work, the approachability of his protagonists and the spiritual/psychological morass that are his antagonists firmly establish his ability as a master storyteller. Joseph Campbell would have had a field day with Connolly’s work.

History has extracted a fierce and bloody price upon the island of Sanctuary. Its first settlers were massacred by one of their own and this has left a malevolent imprint in the very earth. Repopulated after hundreds of years, its guardian, Officer Melancholy Joe Dupree knows the guts of the island, past and present. He senses that something has changed; something has re-awakened. The big heart, in the giant body, is deeply troubled. And flushed with the first glimmer of hope. A newcomer, Marianne, has sought Sanctuary as her new home. But the shadow behind her eyes gives Joe pause. As do the strange events that begin to occur. Something has re- awoken and it’s on its way. And Joe may be all that stands in its way.

This tome takes Connolly well beyond the constraints of mere genre. It stands alone from the Parker series and stands alone from the crass commercialism of many books being published. I am willing to take his literary hand and follow him into Hell because I know I will also find redemption and justice.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars BAD MEN BUT A BRILLIANT AUTHOR
COMPLETELY AND TOTALLY HORRIBLE, BRUTAL, UNIQUE, SUSPENSEFUL AND TOTALLY BRILLIANT APART FROM THE FACT THAT CONNOLLY'S BEST CREATION, CHARLIE PARKER, ONLY PUTS IN A BRIEF... Read more
Published 1 month ago by J. Knight

3.0 out of 5 stars Always promising but ultimately disappointing.
I really enjoy a thriller and enjoyed John Connelly's "Every Dead Thing" immensely. Bad Men, however, just didn't do it for me. Read more
Published 13 months ago by Robert Martin

5.0 out of 5 stars Simply Brilliant
John Connolly has become one of my favourite authors and having read his entire Charlie Parker series and Nocturnes I decided to look at this one, it took me a while to get around... Read more
Published on 22 Jun 2007 by Christopher Morgan

4.0 out of 5 stars Better Than Your Average Thriller
I eat crime stories for breakfast. Well not literally, of course - although they do say there's more goodness to be found in the cardboard box than in the Cornflakes themselves... Read more
Published on 20 Jun 2007 by Catblack_uk

3.0 out of 5 stars Not bad
Following on from the critically acclaimed Charlie Parker series Connolly presents us with his first stand-alone creepy thriller based in his favoured state of Maine, but off the... Read more
Published on 13 Jan 2007 by Pundit

3.0 out of 5 stars Nothing is black or white
I was looking for a Charlie Parker follow on (didn't read the reviews beforehand!) so, apart from 2 lines, that's all you get. Read more
Published on 3 July 2006 by Michael Watson

5.0 out of 5 stars A Chilling Thriller
This was the first JC book which I have read. My initial impression was of a slow over descriptive author, how wrong could I have been. Read more
Published on 26 Aug 2004 by simonhalpin1

5.0 out of 5 stars "Now, something was awake."
John Connolly delivers an impressive thriller, which I found almost impossible to put down after jumping into its exquisitely elaborated plot. Read more
Published on 21 July 2004 by Sebastian Fernandez

3.0 out of 5 stars Sometime effective crime/horror synthesis
The author has already become a best-seller with crime novels with vague supernatural tweaks (which I didn't like much - the supernatural bits) and here he departs for Stephen... Read more
Published on 5 July 2004 by Kentspur

5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant!
I thoroughly enjoyed this book! I have read all of John Connolly's previous books and found myself looking forward to getting home and reading them and waiting for the next, but... Read more
Published on 17 Jun 2004 by ekeep7

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