Monthly Archives: October 2021

Book Review: The Gods of Guilt, Michael Connelly

I’ve long been a fan of Michael Connelly – this Micky Haller story (he of Lincoln Lawyer fame) is one of the good ones. We follow the progress of Haller as he attempts to define La Cosse, a techie with a talent for promoting prostitutes online and managing their business. He is charged with the murder of one of his clients – and before long, Haller realises that the victim was one of his own former clients, Gloria Dayton. Despite the conflict of interest, Haller is convinced that La Cosse is innocent and begins his own investigation into the shady past of Dayton and her associates.

Haller faces a tough challenge in this book. He must dig deep into the past to find out the truth of the case where he previously defended Dayton – potentially uncovering dubious practice by the police and also coming into conflict with a violent criminal whom Dayton’s testimony helped to convict. All this while his own daughter gives him the cold shoulder over the nature of his role in defending the (sometimes) indefensible.

Four stars

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Book Review: The Goodbye Man, Jeffery Deaver

This is the second of three books featuring Deaver’s new character, Colter Shaw. I wasn’t aware that it was a sequel until searching for other books with the same character, so it’s definitely readable out of order. Having said that, there were references to Shaw’s father and his untimely death – that seems to be part of the longer narrative that spans the series.

Colter Shaw is the thinking man’s bounty hunter – he doesn’t just round up (and sometimes kill) fugitives, he approaches the contracts with humanity. In fact, his business manager urges him to be more ruthless, while Shaw is seen to be more focussed on doing the right thing than chasing the money. In this outing, doing the right thing involves investigating the mysterious suicide by one of his bounty targets. The man jumps from a clifftop without fear and with no little serenity. Shaw believes there’s something odd going on within the organisation where the man has spent the preceding months, immersed in new-age rituals and beliefs. So he signs up for a season of self-improvement himself, hoping to uncover the truth.

Shaw is a capable operator, trained by his father in a host of rules by which to hunt and evade capture. He’s also a decent fighter – but it’s his mentality that intriguing. Who, other than Jack Reacher, would put himself into harm’s way just because something didn’t seem right?

Three stars

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