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Jack O'Connell (1959–2024)

Author of The Resurrectionist

Jack O'Connell is Jack O'Connell (1). For other authors named Jack O'Connell, see the disambiguation page.

9+ Works 852 Members 39 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: Jack O'Connell

Series

Works by Jack O'Connell

The Resurrectionist (2008) 331 copies, 29 reviews
Box Nine (1992) 163 copies, 5 reviews
Word Made Flesh (1999) 129 copies, 2 reviews
Wireless (1993) 125 copies, 2 reviews
The Skin Palace (1996) 93 copies, 1 review
Dark Alleys of Noir (2002) — Editor — 4 copies
Legerdemain 3 copies

Associated Works

The Best American Mystery Stories : 2004 (2004) — Contributor — 150 copies, 1 review
Fantasy: The Best of 2001 (2002) — Contributor — 45 copies

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Reviews

48 reviews
The Resurrectionist is a mind-warping surrealist look at where coma victims disappear to during their perpetual slumbering. The Peck clinic is famous for its ability to treat and awaken comatose individuals. With mysterious techniques it has woken two people in the past, and Sweeney is fervently praying for a 3rd; his young son. Meanwhile the Goldfaden Freaks, a hodgepodge of physically anomalous individuals who make up a circus sideshow, have abandoned their employers to voyage across the show more country.

You would think these two plots would have little to do with one another, right? You'd be surprised.

The two stories, while worlds apart, share many parallels that remain frustratingly vague, which I believe allows the reader to draw their own connections and conclusions. The book a golem to be molded by the reader, the ending isn't entirely resolute and many aspects of the story remains obscure, but it was the journey that was most important. I'm still unsure about much of the happenings within the story, yet I enjoyed every minute I spent reading it.

A strange book, but an enjoyable one!
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The Resurrectionist is probably not a book I would normally have bought on my own, though the title (which I love) would have intrigued me enough to pick it off the shelf and give it a good gander. Fast paced, part mystery, part circus freak show, part outlaw biker-gang escapades, part comatose child and his insomniac, pharmacist father, part creepy coma clinic, part dark fantasy, and part Limbo comic book adventure (though the comic book part of it, come to find out, incorporates all of the show more above parts listed), The Resurrectionist, simply put, is hard to classify. Which is probably a good thing. It’s not pure mystery, not pure fantasy, not pure hardboiled noir, not pure tragedy, not pure father/son contemporary drama, though it is, nonetheless, pure fun. The Resurrectionist is a dream world adventure into and out of a parallel universe. When the two universes collide, broken, despairing lives become whole. I highly recommend it. show less
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
This is the weirdest of the 5 (so far) books in the Quinsigamond series and that is saying something. Sweeney is a man on the edge. Unable to cope with the guilt of not being there when his son Danny's accident occurred he will do anything to try and restore Danny from the coma he's been in ever since. That's all he lives for so when an opening appears at the renowned Peck clinic in Quinsigamond, Sweeney applies and is granted a place for his son amongst the patients. He is also taken on as show more a pharmacist within the clinic itself. Events don't transpire exactly as he's hoped and soon find Sweeney enmeshed with a biker group that's also made it's way to the rust-belt factory town who have plans of their own for Sweeney and Danny. Which way will Sweeney eventually lean? Who can he trust to do the right thing for his son?

Interjected within this story we are also treated to excerpts from Danny's favourite comic book, Limbo, which is about a troupe of freaks forced to flee from their circus home and follow the mystical instructions given to the chicken boy when he enters into Limbo while in the grip of a seizure. While fleeing a mad doctor they're trying to re-unite chicken boy with his long lost father believed to be on the far shores of Gehenna. I did mention that this book was weird, right?

The two narratives eventually join up to form a whole that speculates on consciousness and where we go when that is lost and the feelings of guilt and rage of those that get left behind. It also takes a look at how stories can have an effect on people's lives and not always for the betterment thereof. This book will not be everyone's cup of tea, the characters in the main are mostly unlikeable, there's quite a mishmash of elements in the storytelling linking gothic and noirish mystery that will not sit well with everyone. But for me, because I've enjoyed the previous work of the author it seems to have built nicely to this. I wouldn't recommend this as a first experience of his work though but I found it quite compelling.
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With Box Nine, author Jack O’Connell presents his colourful and highly original version of a noir thriller. Set in the fictional north-eastern American city of Quinsigamond. Once a thriving metropolis, now a dark, gritty place of hard times and even harder people. Violence and corruption seems to be the rule of the day.

The main character, Detective Lenore Thomas, is one of the most remarkable and interesting characters I’ve met in a book in a long time. To quote the back cover, show more “she’s addicted to speed, rough sex, heavy metal and her gun’. Lenore knows the streets and back alleys of Quinsigamond and works as a undercover narcotic officer. The city is on the verge of an all out drug war, and to make things even more volatile a new manufactured drug has appeared on the scene. This drug with the street name of Lingo offers an unusually potent high, along with heightened linguistic abilities, but with a downside of extreme violence and babbling insanity.

What sets this book apart from a straight forward noir thriller, are the many cultural references and the psychological and philosophical diatribes that many of the characters get involved in. Box Nine is not a book for everyone, with it’s crudeness and violence, but will be a book that stays with me and gives me much to ponder upon. I think Jack O’Connell is an amazing author, and I look forward to exploring more of his work in the future.
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Works
9
Also by
2
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Rating
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Reviews
39
ISBNs
77
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