Home :: Books :: Audio CDs  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs

Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
The Poet (Brilliance Audio on Compact Disc)

The Poet (Brilliance Audio on Compact Disc)

List Price: $14.99
Your Price: $10.19
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: worth reading if you have read his better Bosch books first
Review: This book started off interesting enough. I was engaged for the first few chapters and then it became very predictable and tired... as though Connelly were going through the motions after he set up an interesting premise. The characters here have nothing to do with Bosch in this book, but interestingly they find themselves in a later Bosch novel, I think it was `The Narrows.' Connelly seems to be enjoying combing his earlier work without Bosch and tying everything together, which is admirable.
I think that Connelly is getting to the end of his career as a writer. And this saddens me. Primarily because he never wrote a book that truly meets his talent head on. I wish that he had allowed for himself to struggle a little bit more as an author. I think that the great character known as Harry Bosch and all of the neat tied up ends of every book are fine and all, but it's not enough. Even though his stories walk the edge of something dangerous they never break any literary boundaries as Hammett and Chandler did in their own day. The Bosch works might even surpass these two luminaries in some aspects, but Connelly has had decades of other authors to feed upon and add to the flavor of his plots. Thus these books are slightly underwhelming. Besides Lawrence Block, I think that Connelly had one of the best chances to overcome the predictability of our contemporary thrillers. He has not yet done so. Instead he constantly tries to grapple with what I assume are his own doubts by sending every novel needlessly over the top into a stereotypical 1980's shoot-em out cop drama. So sad.

This is a fine read unto itself, I give it three stars and think that if you have read the better Bosch books by Connelly, this book will not let you down too hard. In fact it is an enjoyable time consumer.


Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Wow!
Review: This has to be the best Connelly book I have tackled yet! I could not put it down.

The Poet begins when homicide journalist Jack McEvoy's twin brother (a Homicide Detective), kills himself. To confront grief in his own way, Jack decides to do what he does best, and write about what happened. It is during his investigations he discovers clues which lead him to believe that his brother died in suspicious circumstances.

In a trail of red herrings which spans across the States, Jack follows clues to piece together the puzzle of his brothers death. Aided by an inventive range of characters (including the cliched bombshell, intelligent, alluring female lead), Jack discovers the shocking truth about what really happened that day.

A word of warning to the faint hearted, 'The Poet' contains a myrriad of references to child abuse which you might find offensive. Despite this, the book is tastefully written, and is extremely suspensful. I often found myself wondering how on earth Connelly came up with this stuff though.

For crime lovers, I thoroughly recommend this one. I love Harry Bosch, but I have to say that 'The Poet' topped all others I have read. Don't miss the fascinating note by Stephen King at the start - was a great prelude to a great novel.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Intriguing
Review: This is the first book I've read by Mr. Connelly and I found it to be a great read. Jack McEvoy is a crime reporter whose twin brother, a homicide investigator, is brutally murdered. Although the police rule the death a suicide, Jack is unable to accept this and begins his own investigation. This leads to the discovery of similar murders involving other homicide investigators across America, and the FBI becomes involved. Jack is allowed to be part of the investigation and becomes involved with Rachel Walling, an agent with the FBI.

This mystery is full of twists and turns and is a fascinating read. The characters are great, the investigation intriguing, and the real Poet a surprise.

Call me a fan.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Poet
Review: This was a good book, of course I don't read many and end up thinking most i read are good books.

It was about this serial killer named the poet, who got a rush from killing homocide detectives. He (the poet) used grotesque murders of innocent children(they are molested and mutilatet), or girls who worked with children(also mutilated) to lure his homocide detectives in. Once they got depressed from obsessing over the murders and not finding the culprit, the poet capped them and made it look like a suicide.

Then, this reporter's brother is one of the victims of the strike from the poet's right hand. He investigates more into it, and discovered someone is nocking off police officers.

When I first started reading it, I found it interesting how the writer followed the trail of the Poet, and even bothered to tell us his name, and what he was up to. This is a fairly good book. Like I said, I dont read many, so i dont know if I can fairly justify the goodness of it. It had a couple of twists, which I ran across, like his later book I had read before, "Bloodwork" (which I still havent seen). And, the reason I had read that is because I wanted to see the movie.

I still don't get how you can shoot yourself in the head with a 12 gauge shotgun. And about me not reading alot, I usually just read up until the last few pages, which wasnt true about this book.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Great book until the end...
Review: This was a very thought out, excellent suspense novel. However, the ending totally blew it. I would have rated this a 5 until the last 40 or so pages. Connelly should have gone with his first idea, not his second. I loved the characterization of the book, althought Jack was weak when it came to women. The story line was very interesting. A killer on the loose, abuses and kills children, then the investigating officers supposedly commit suicide. Jack discovers a pattern and discovers these are homicides not suicides. So he follows the FBI around, unwelcomed. The story progresses nicely and builds up. But when the conflict starts to resolve, it unravels. I was disappointed in the end but I still think it was a good book. I'm still not giving up on Connelly since his Bosch series is fantastic.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: As an introduction to Michael Connelly...
Review: This was my first Connelly book, and safe to say I'm totally hooked.
From reading about his other books, this is one of his non-Bosch books, and as such, was a fortunate place to begin.

What we have here is an old-fashioned page turner. A bare bones summary would be a Denver reporter loses his twin brother cop to suicide, purportedly over a particularly disturbing, unsolved homicide. As he copes, the reporter learns about a number of police suicides, with several seeming related.

At that point in the novel, it becomes a struggle to put the book down. I had to remind myself to slow my reading so I wouldn't miss anything, yet I was tearing through the pages as fast as I could. You won't want to be bothered by anything else for a few hours.

The manhunt is breathlessly told, and becomes scarier as you peek into the mind of the perpetrator. Comparisons to "Silence of The Lambs" are understandable, but unfair. Honestly, this book isn't as good as THAT one, but it doesn't miss by much. Lector is nothing like the Poet; they're two different animals.

The final quarter of the book is best read at night, or better yet, like 3:00 or 4:00 in the morning, with only a lamp illuminating the page. It's a bit thrilling when the pieces fit together so unexpectedly yet neatly. There's a satisfying click to each piece of the puzzle as it fits into place.

Here's my big problem: the paperback edition I read ends with a several-page peek at his recent book, "The Narrows." If I'm not mistaken, characters from this book make it into that one, but somehow dovetails with his other books, of which there hae been seven or eight in between.

My problem then is that I have one heck of a lot of reading to do...


<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates