Sunday, November 22, 2020

Walk the Wire by David Baldacci

 

Walk the Wire by David Baldacci












(Please click the link to visit my blog, read this review in its entirety, and browse other recent Rawles' Reads!)


This might be the best Amos Decker yet, excepting the first one! Wowza!!!!  So many plot twists and murders and connections and surprises in this classic Baldacci thriller.  Decker and Jamison are in North Dakota to investigate a strange murder/dead body, and we go along for the ride to learn all about fracking, small town politics, best friends who drift apart, jealousy, affairs, and a couple of surprise cameos by characters that will have discerning readers jumping with literary joy.


Ok, maybe not jumping, but I did pump my fist.  Once.


Keep it a surprise and don't read more reviews!  That is one that should not be spoiled.  


Baldacci's style is typical here - short sentences, very little bridging between scenes ("They drove to the house.  He thought about the case.  Decker left." (HA, I love it when Decker just ups and leaves the room in mid-sentence.))  But in this one the case itself is so complicated I almost needed a character list to keep track.  Definitely kept my attention!


I am also very intrigued at how Decker's abilities and conditions seem to be mutating.  In the last book or two he has had brief scenes of empathy and understanding, which are lacking because of his brain injury from football years ago.  Jamison notices and isn't sure what to think about her partner and dare I say bff.  I like that there is no romance between the two.  But she sure does look out for him, as he does for her.  Nice.


{One small complaint - I get annoyed that the author refers to everyone by their last names.  The victims, the main characters, and ok fine this is what really bugs me - the women!!!  The Southern girl in me gets tripped up by this.  Maybe it is a policeman lingo thing, so I guess I get it for his partner Jamison (who he sometimes calls Alex - pick one!). But for the victims?  Just call her Irene for goodness sake!  Or Ms. Cramer.  Or the Victim (although, too many victims here to warrant a singular).  A small thing in the overall, but still, wondering if anyone else thinks this way?}


This is a great story, I love The Memory Man, and won't say much more about the plot.  If you are  a Memory Man fan, you should definitely read this one.  I have read them all in order, but I am not sure you really need to do so.  Of course, the first one you need to read, and I prefer to read books like this in order personally.  But I think you could skip the fourth one, and just dive into the fifth and sixth.  Some similarities in the small town bust scenario, but worth it.  

Monday, November 9, 2020

Redemption by David Baldacci

 



Redemption by David Baldacci









Back on track, Decker!  (This is #5 in the series....#4 wasn't really my favorite.)


The fourth book in the Memory Man series is fabulously convoluted and twisty and I did not see everything coming.  And neither did Decker.  WHAT???  He notices and remembers EVERYTHING!


Some of this tangled web becomes obvious and Baldacci tries to slip in some overlooked clues which I caught.  But whoa Nelly, I did not see the overall result coming!!  

Decker goes back to his hometown annually to visit the grave of his daughter, murdered one night several years ago while he was staying late at work to try to solve another case.  His guilt is overwhelming and he channels his energies into tracking down other killers.  As he visits the graveside, an elderly man approaches him and declares his innocence.  Amos recognizes him as his first case - found guilty of four murders.  Could Amos have been mistaken in his work?  Infathomable!


But....yet, Amos begins to delve into what really happened all those years ago, and more questions than answers pile up, along with additional dead bodies.  Reunited with his former police partner while Alex Jamison heads back to FBI headquarters, Amos struggles with his own guilt, with whether the case was a set up, and who was involved and why.  Some simple language and syntax in this one keeps it from being a five star read.  This is not prose, but it is a very good mystery/crime drama!

The Fallen by David Baldacci

 


The Fallen by David Baldacci











One of my favorite writers and series (The Memory Man/Amos Decker series), but this offering was not as strong as the first three.  A timely topic indeed with the emphasis on the epidemic of drug use in our country and the existence of bad cops, and I did like putting Alex front and center in this story, with some background and family life from her side.  Still definitely worth a read; I always hate giving three stars even though that does mean I LIKED it, because it seems like I am being critical.  But, there are better Baldaccis out there and this one was just not the best in the series.  I still like Amos and his uncanny abilities, and we are given a hint in this installment that his lack of empathy towards others may be softening, as may his ability to remember every single detail (both conditions stemming from a TBI on the NFL football field years ago).  Looking forward to seeing how that twist on the entire premise of why Amos is such a good investigator holds forth in future installments!!!