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Lost Light
 
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Lost Light (Paperback)

by Michael Connelly (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Orion (1 April 2003)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0752856561
  • ISBN-13: 978-0752856568
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 15 x 4.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 443,719 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Michael Connolly has written seven books featuring the hard-boiled Vietnam vet-turned-LAPD detective Harry Bosch and Lost Light sees him ride again. The astringent and vivid realisation of the city of Los Angeles (quite as sharply done as in the great novels of Raymond Chandler) and the layers of complexity created for Bosch made him one of the most interesting and well-realised characters in modern crime fiction. Even the overused device of alcohol abuse in the detective was treated with freshness and imagination. Such non-Bosch titles as Chasing the Dime have their virtues, but most admirers will frankly be relieved that Harry is back in action.

When Harry Bosch left the LAPD, he took with him a murder file about a film production assistant killed four years before during a large-scale robbery on a movie set. The LAPD has decided that the stolen money was utilised to create a terrorist training camp, and there are moves to release the killer to enable the FBI to track down the terrorists. Needless to say, this does not go down well with the volatile Harry, and he soon finds himself up against his erstwhile colleagues at the LAPD and the implacable forces of the FBI.

In the earlier Bosch novels, it's clear that the flintily wrought characterisation and gritty scene-setting concealed some less-than-original plots, but here we've got a triumphant marriage of innovative, hard-edge narrative and a parade of characters quite as vivid as any in the genre. The set pieces have all the usual panache, and the larger and more detailed canvas is carried off with considerable dash. --Barry Forshaw



Review

'Lost Light is every bit as good as Connelly's eight other Harry Bosch novels, which is to say very good indeed. In the hands of lesser writers, putting their hero into retirement might suggest that they were running out of ideas.In Connelly's case, it seems to presage an outpouring of equally excellent stories seen from a different angle: Lost Light, unlike the other eight Harry Bosch novels, is written in the first person. For the first time, readers enter the complex mind of one of the most interesting detectives in American crime fiction. Marcel Berlins THE TIMES 26/4/03 'Lost Light is a wry, character-driven autumnal affair...A lonely, self-deprecating figure, Bosch is an engaging throwback to a time before email and faxes when ageing private dicks learnt to play the sax and used expressions such as 'get jazzed'. Yet it is 'things of the heart' that really excite him... If ever a PI deserved a warm cuddly denouement, it is Harry Bosch.' DAILY TELEGRAPH 26/4/03 'It's good to see Harry Bosch, the hero of so many of Michael Connell's books, back in action after his retirement from the LAPD... Lost Light shows that Harry is still a maverick, continuing to go his own way despite warnings, and persevering until he has uncovered evidence of a shameful conspiracy. This new book shows why the Bosch series has made Connelly one of the genre's most consistently enjoyable writers.' SUNDAY TELEGRAPH 25/5/03 'Lost Light transcends the usual narrow confines of crime fiction. Many American authors brought out books in the wake of September 11, often as exploitative patriotism. Connelly goes deeper: he shows how American society has allowed its values to be undermined ... this is a brave and complex book far removed from the baggy shapelessness of much recent US crime writing.' Jane Jakeman, SCOTLAND ON SUNDAY 23/3/03 'The best crime fiction uses the extreme nature of death to examine the fragile realities of life, and Connelly is writing the best detective fiction out there.' Michael Carlson THE SPECTATOR 14/6/03 'A real return to form for Connelly, and a welcome return to action for Harry Bosch. Lost Light is a gripping, intense novel; Bosch is a complex but very human character and Lost Light will cement Connelly's reputation.' CRIME TIME '[A] brilliantly integrated novel.' THE SUNDAY TIMES 20/3/03 'Lost Light is something to be savoured: a new thriller featuring old sourpuss Harry Bosch. ... Weaving a complex plot - nobody does it better - Connelly holds the reader's attention right up to the satisfying denouement.' IRISH TIMES 28/6/03 'Warm, astute, persuasive portrait of conscience driven Bosch, his occupation gone, passing his days trying not to smoke... A first-to-last page gripper with dogged detective work, a shoot-out so unexpected that it had me ducking for cover, and an anxiety about police power that is proper, timely and authentic. All set out to prose that's too modest to brag about its muscle (Bosch sees 'a woman so pale ... she might detonate like a match on the Nevada sun') and so well tuned that it delights and nudges the memory for weeks after first reading.' Philip Oakes LITERARY REVIEW May 03 'terrific thriller' TIME OUT 10 September 'Harry Bosch is a great creation, complex, emotionally vulnerable but honest to the core and, as he defiesthe might of the FBI in search of the truth, his bleakness of spirit lifts and the book's surprise ending gives him a great stake in the future. Thoroughly rewarding.' IRISH INDEPENDENT 26/4/03 'Lost Light is a new high for Connelly ... by the way, there's an uplifting epilogue that could have been schmaltzy but instead turns into one of sheer joy.' DUBLIN SUNDAY TRIBUNE 11/5/03 'Bosch and Connelly remain one of the best cop partnerships in the detecting business.' BIRMINGHAM SUNDAY MERCURY 13/4/03

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Customer Reviews

23 Reviews
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 (13)
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 (9)
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (23 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The best Bosch novel since "The Last Coyote"., 14 April 2003
By J. Anderson (Scotland) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
There’s something special about that time of the year when Harry Bosch comes out to play. I tried to take the latest in the Michael Connelly series at a nice slow pace in order to savour the moment. Easier said than done: the pages demand that they are turned over in as quick and efficient a manner as possible.

Followers of Bosch will know that “Lost Light” heralds a new beginning for the detective after the dramatic ending to “City of Bones”. Anyone not up to date with the series is advised to stop reading this review right now unless they want the surprise turn of events at the end of the last novel spoiled for them.

So, how does Harry cope now that he’s no longer a Homicide Detective? After an initial period of savouring the joys of retirement he wants to get back to his mission in life: catching bad guys who have up to that point literally got away with murder. This shouldn’t be a problem as, Bosch being Bosch, he didn’t walk out the door of the department for the last time before taking with him a bundle of unsolved case notes. One of these cases is providing Harry with something to get his teeth into during the course of “Lost Light”. However, without the cover of a badge Bosch manages to antagonise both his former colleagues at the L.A.P.D. and the F.B.I. while undertaking his private investigation. Of course, not carrying a badge gives the former police officer far greater flexibility in his movements.

So, does the new format work? It most certainly does – the plot is extremely good and releasing Bosch from the bondage of having to answer to Chief Irving and co. for his every action is a good move.

The other change to the ninth Bosch novel is the switch from third to first person in the narrative. I wasn’t sure about how this would play but in truth you couldn’t help but slip effortlessly into the book; also, Bosch telling the story added a lot to his character depth – he was already one of my favourites in the crime genre alongside Rebus, Scudder and Robicheaux.

In conclusion: not quite up to the standard of “The Last Coyote” but the best Connelly in a number of years and a massive improvement on his last stand alone thriller “Chasing The Dime”. Harry Bosch’s change of direction should ensure a steady flow of top quality additions to the series from Mr Connelly in the coming years.

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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The best Bosch novel since "The Last Coyote"., 4 Jun 2003
By J. Anderson (Scotland) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
There's something special about that time of the year when Harry Bosch comes out to play. I tried to take the latest in the Michael Connelly series at a nice slow pace in order to savour the moment. Easier said than done: the pages demand that they are turned over in as quick and efficient a manner as possible.

Followers of Bosch will know that "Lost Light" heralds a new beginning for the detective after the dramatic ending to "City of Bones". Anyone not up to date with the series is advised to stop reading this review right now unless they want the surprise turn of events at the end of the last novel spoiled for them.

So, how does Harry cope now that he's no longer a Homicide Detective? After an initial period of savouring the joys of retirement he wants to get back to his mission in life: catching bad guys who have up to that point literally got away with murder. This shouldn't be a problem as, Bosch being Bosch, he didn't walk out the door of the department for the last time before taking with him a bundle of unsolved case notes. One of these cases is providing Harry with something to get his teeth into during the course of "Lost Light". However, without the cover of a badge Bosch manages to antagonise both his former colleagues at the L.A.P.D. and the F.B.I. while undertaking his private investigation. Of course, not carrying a badge gives the former police officer far greater flexibility in his movements.

So, does the new format work? It most certainly does - the plot is extremely good and releasing Bosch from the bondage of having to answer to Chief Irving and co. for his every action is a good move.

The other change to the ninth Bosch novel is the switch from third to first person in the narrative. I wasn't sure about how this would play but in truth you couldn't help but slip effortlessly into the book; also, Bosch telling the story added a lot to his character depth - he was already one of my favourites in the crime genre alongside Rebus, Scudder and Robicheaux.

In conclusion: not quite up to the standard of "The Last Coyote" but the best Connelly in a number of years and a massive improvement on his last stand alone thriller "Chasing The Dime". Harry Bosch's change of direction should ensure a steady flow of top quality additions to the series from Mr Connelly in the coming years.

Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)



 
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The best Bosch novel since "The Last Coyote"., 28 April 2003
By J. Anderson (Scotland) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
There’s something special about that time of the year when Harry Bosch comes out to play. I tried to take the latest in the Michael Connelly series at a nice slow pace in order to savour the moment. Easier said than done: the pages demand that they are turned over in as quick and efficient a manner as possible.

Followers of Bosch will know that “Lost Light” heralds a new beginning for the detective after the dramatic ending to “City of Bones”. Anyone not up to date with the series is advised to stop reading this review right now unless they want the surprise turn of events at the end of the last novel spoiled for them.

So, how does Harry cope now that he’s no longer a Homicide Detective? After an initial period of savouring the joys of retirement he wants to get back to his mission in life: catching bad guys who have up to that point literally got away with murder. This shouldn’t be a problem as, Bosch being Bosch, he didn’t walk out the door of the department for the last time before taking with him a bundle of unsolved case notes. One of these cases is providing Harry with something to get his teeth into during the course of “Lost Light”. However, without the cover of a badge Bosch manages to antagonise both his former colleagues at the L.A.P.D. and the F.B.I. while undertaking his private investigation. Of course, not carrying a badge gives the former police officer far greater flexibility in his movements.

So, does the new format work? It most certainly does – the plot is extremely good and releasing Bosch from the bondage of having to answer to Chief Irving and co. for his every action is a good move.

The other change to the ninth Bosch novel is the switch from third to first person in the narrative. I wasn’t sure about how this would play but in truth you couldn’t help but slip effortlessly into the book; also, Bosch telling the story added a lot to his character depth – he was already one of my favourites in the crime genre alongside Rebus, Scudder and Robicheaux.

In conclusion: not quite up to the standard of “The Last Coyote” but the best Connelly in a number of years and a massive improvement on his last stand alone thriller “Chasing The Dime”. Harry Bosch’s change of direction should ensure a steady flow of top quality additions to the series from Mr Connelly in the coming years.

Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)


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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Once a cop, always a cop
Published in 2003, Lost Light by Michael Connelly is the 9th Harry Bosch novel in an outstanding series set in Los Angeles that shows no signs of diminishing returns at all. Read more
Published 12 months ago by Annabel Gaskell

5.0 out of 5 stars Paradise Found
Published in 2003, LOST LIGHT is the ninth in the Harry Bosch series and Connelly's thirteenth novel in all. Read more
Published 15 months ago by OEJ

4.0 out of 5 stars Policing Cold Cases without a Badge
You can quit the force, but can you get it out of your blood? Clearly not based on this excellent novel about a retired Harry Bosch seeking justice for a murdered woman. Read more
Published 16 months ago by Professor Donald Mitchell

4.0 out of 5 stars Lost Light Excites (Sometimes)
Lost Light is a good book not as good as city of bones but if you want something to keep you occupied then its worth buying, its all like reading a script from an old clint... Read more
Published on 10 Aug 2004 by opengatebooks

5.0 out of 5 stars Lost Light
I fell in love with Harry Bosch, from a previous book I read, and I could feel his frustrations towards the case he had re opened since his retirement from the LAPD. Read more
Published on 10 Nov 2003 by C. Day

5.0 out of 5 stars Bosch is back - in a dark almost nightmarish novel
After two rather dissapointing (for the standards of Michael Connelly) novels, this on really ties in with his early books and will take your breath away. Read more
Published on 10 Nov 2003 by Thorsten Mühl

4.0 out of 5 stars First-class Bosch
Michael Connelly writes like a dream and Bosch is such a wonderful character that I couldn't put this book down. Read more
Published on 7 Sep 2003

5.0 out of 5 stars Harry Bosch in his own words
Excellent - Michael Connelly provides full entertainment with Harry Bosch. For the first time Bosch is actually telling the tale and this provides some interesting insights. Read more
Published on 11 Jul 2003

5.0 out of 5 stars Bosch is back and better than ever!
Wow! This is one good book--from the old case that Harry starts working on, which has quite a few surprises in store for him, to the ending, which I won't say anything about... Read more
Published on 27 May 2003 by fawltymac

5.0 out of 5 stars Better than ever
I have enjoyed most of Michael Connolly's books but this new one, Lost Light, is the best so far. His detective Harry Bosch has retired from the police department but he can't... Read more
Published on 19 May 2003

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