Michael Connelly's THE CONCRETE BLONDE BOOK REVIEW |
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Harry Bosch is a burned out, chain-smoking Los Angeles detective who still has nightmares about serving as a "tunnel rat" during the war in 'Nam. His first appearance was in a novel called THE BLACK ECHO, back in 1991. A fine sequel, THE BLACK ICE made Edgar winner Michael Connelly a name to be reckoned with. Then came this novel, THE CONCRETE BLONDE. I also loved the sequels THE LAST COYOTE, TRUNK MUSIC, and (not as much) ANGEL'S FLIGHT. But, since I figured Feo wouldn't give me half his site to rave about the guy, I had to pick one. So I did. Okay, I love Bosch. Finally, a hero named Harry. He's tough. He hits people. He resents authority. He manipulates both his bosses at Parker Center and the media. He also screws up regularly and is always in trouble with somebody upstairs. But like a brainier Lt. Columbo he picks and persists and probes and ultimately gets his man. He is smart without being brilliant, relentlessly dedicated and impossible to corrupt (something to be admired here in Los Angeles). He is less successful with the ladies he pursues, they are troubled souls all; but our Harry keeps plugging away. While not plotted quite as deviously as THE BLACK ICE, THE CONCRETE BLONDE is a masterpiece of what I call the "police procedural noir." It has several plot lines running simultaneously: Harry Bosch, whose relationship has begun to go a bit sour, is being sued by the widow of a man he shot and killed several years ago; a suspect who reached for something while being arrested. This was a man believed guilty of several murders under the nom de plume "The Dollmaker." The widow is now crying police brutality, and arguing that the evidence against her husband was circumstantial. Just as Bosch is about to testify, another body is discovered, poured into the concrete foundation of a building . . . and the MO is identical to that of The Dollmaker.
Connelly is a master at planting and re-using images, and the concrete blonde of
the title is THE CONCRETE BLONDE switches back-and-forth between the courtroom and the murder investigation, as the pressure slowly mounts on Harry. In Michael Connelly's novels there tends to be a number of suspects, each of whom is slowly eliminated until a surprise perpetrator is revealed, often as a shock to the hero. In this book, Bosch gets ahead of both the reader and the other characters for a nice, clean finish. If you love this kind of novel, I highly recommend the entire Bosch series and in particular, THE CONCRETE BLONDE. Four bookwyrms from a true lover of mysteries. This review copyright 2002 E.C.McMullen Jr.
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