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Loading... Chasing the Dimeby Michael Connelly
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. One of my first books by Connelly. Quick pace, enjoyed the characters, nice plot line. Good quick read as I constantly felt I needed to read just a page or two more. ( )Not realising that this was not a Harry Bosch novel, I wasted some energy waiting for him to turn up. By the time light dawned, I was engrossed. Connelly depicts a protagonist who is interesting but unlikely to be a very rewarding friend and I could see why his girlfriend had left him. For a long time I could not understand why thecharacter was so compelled to take such risky actons when he had so much to lose ; this was an essential plot element and I thought it grossly artificial until the whole story had unfolded. The technology that provides the tale's environment fascinated me but I found some of the dated consumer technolgy quite jarring in a story about emerging technologies. For all that, it was an emotionally rich adventure. Had trouble with the title and the hero. He stupidly neglected his business for a dead prostitute. The connection between his sister and the dead woman was not strong enough for me to believe he couldn’t wait a week to investigate. Read to the end nonetheless. Really good read ,got me thinking at times I knew where it was going then BAM!! another plot twist. Overall very good. I've enjoyed two books by Connelly. This is not one of them. It is very difficult for me to continue reading when I loath the main character. But I had previously read and liked two books by Connelly, so I said to myself "just another 100 pages" after the first 66 pages were read. I read the book that way all the way up to the final 66 pages when I realized that I might as well finish the book as there were only 66 pages left. I will likely read another book by Connelly, but the only reason why I might read a non-series book again is the simple fact that I already own some of his other non-series books. Highly unlikely that I'll read any book by Connelly any time soon, but the next book will have to be from that same series I've already read and liked, or I'm just not going to read him again. There are just too many books out there to read. 1. loathed the main character almost immediately 2. some twists and turns that were simply unrealistic 3. very boring stuff about biological computers; chemically created engines for delivery systems in the human body (the idea is interesting enough, it was all the data dump of information on the subject that was tedious).
It doesn't have the urgency of his best work, but it also avoids his tendency to work in one plot twist too many until the plausibility of his story falls to bits... Still, "Chasing the Dime" is well-plotted and it holds your interest, and it's easy to picture the book's high-tech shenanigans translating well to the screen.
Amazon.com (ISBN 044661162X, Mass Market Paperback)Henry Pierce is about to become very rich--as soon as his firm, Amedeo Technologies, gets an infusion of capital from a big backer. But the brilliant chemist's workaholic habits are disrupted when his lover, the former intelligence officer of his company, breaks up with him. Lonely and dispirited, he moves into a new apartment and gets a new phone number that attracts a lot of callers, but not for him. His new telephone number seems to have previously belonged to one Lilly Quinlan, an escort whose Internet photo arouses Henry's curiosity, especially when L.A. Darlings, whose Web page features the beautiful young woman, can't tell Henry how to find her. With the same single-mindedness that made him a high-tech superstar, Pierce pursues his search for the missing girl, motivated by his guilt over the disappearance years earlier of his own sister, who, like Lilly, was also a prostitute (and ultimately the victim of the Dollmaker, a serial killer from Connelly's 1994 novel The Concrete Blonde.) But that motive is too thin to support Pierce's sudden abandonment of his career at such a critical juncture, even if forces unknown to him are setting him up for a fall. Despite those holes in the plot and a less than compelling protagonist, the novel succeeds due to Connelly's literary and expository gifts and his more interesting secondary characters. --Jane Adams(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:57 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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