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"During a rally in the searing heat of a Virginia summer, two men plummet from a building into the crowd below. The victims are a white police officer and a young black man with a troubled past. And though hundreds of people stood at the scene, nobody saw what happened. Or are they just not talking? FBI agent Raleigh Harmon, one of Richmond's own, has to solve the case--and fast. The Bureau wants a quick verdict, with or without the truth. But with tight-lipped witnesses, Raleigh must rely show more on her instincts and her training in forensic geology to uncover the facts. Working her connections with the city's powerful families and its seedy underbelly, Raleigh is determined to see justice prevail. Will she solve the case before the growing racial unrest rages out of control? Or will her choices ultimately bring down everyone involved--including Raleigh herself?"--Cover. show lessTags
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Member Reviews
The Stones Cry Out is the first book in Sibella Giorello’s Raleigh Harmon series. I started this series with book 3, so I was really interested to get back to the beginning — of great writing and a great character. Giorello is one of my favorite suspense writers. If you haven’t read any of her books or if you started in the middle like me, check out The Stones Cry Out.
Things are hot in Richmond in the summer. But the heat is not the only thing getting tempers hot. A civil rights investigation by the FBI into the deaths of a white policeman and a black businessman has the city on edge. And while the two plummeted to their deaths in the midst of a demonstration, there are no witnesses to the incident. Raleigh Harmon, geologist show more turned agent, is charged with the investigation and getting the case closed quickly. No one seems interested in finding out just what happened. But Raleigh, who is haunted by her own unsolved case, won’t give up.
Raleigh Harmon is a great character. She has lots of baggage — a father murdered in a mugging, a sister that thinks the FBI is no better than the Gestapo, and a mother who struggles with mental stabilbity. Raleigh also has a strong sense of right and wrong. Her faith keeps her going despite the obstacles thrown in her way — a vindictive boss, hostile citizens and uncooperative police. Raleigh is a complex character with plenty of flaws and lots to love. The story is also a great twisting mystery. The forensic investigation is just as important as the hunches Raleigh follows. The Stones Cry Out is great for those who like CSI or Bones.
I loved this book and look forward to #2 in the series, The Rivers Run Dry.
Recommended. show less
Things are hot in Richmond in the summer. But the heat is not the only thing getting tempers hot. A civil rights investigation by the FBI into the deaths of a white policeman and a black businessman has the city on edge. And while the two plummeted to their deaths in the midst of a demonstration, there are no witnesses to the incident. Raleigh Harmon, geologist show more turned agent, is charged with the investigation and getting the case closed quickly. No one seems interested in finding out just what happened. But Raleigh, who is haunted by her own unsolved case, won’t give up.
Raleigh Harmon is a great character. She has lots of baggage — a father murdered in a mugging, a sister that thinks the FBI is no better than the Gestapo, and a mother who struggles with mental stabilbity. Raleigh also has a strong sense of right and wrong. Her faith keeps her going despite the obstacles thrown in her way — a vindictive boss, hostile citizens and uncooperative police. Raleigh is a complex character with plenty of flaws and lots to love. The story is also a great twisting mystery. The forensic investigation is just as important as the hunches Raleigh follows. The Stones Cry Out is great for those who like CSI or Bones.
I loved this book and look forward to #2 in the series, The Rivers Run Dry.
Recommended. show less
This thriller about a FBI agent investigating the possible racial motive behind a double homicide seemed run of the mill to me. Special agent Raleigh Harmon is said FBI investigator working near her southern hometown--so lots of family issues come to play as well. It is a bit convoluted and not very memorable.
Mostly a suspense, but without the heightened sense of danger to the heroine. Set in contemporary Richmond, the story follows FBI agent and forensic geologist Raleigh as she investigates a civil rights case in which a white cop and a local African-American hero both fall off an abandoned building in front of 600 people, none of whom come forward as witnesses. The Christian message is not blatant, but rather focuses on Raleigh’s trouble with the investigation, the unsolved murder of her father four years past, and her mother’s growing mania. Short, fast-paced chapters keep the reader involved, even if some of the scenes lack detail and resort to stereotypes (snobbish and unwashed college students and professors, a general disregard show more for the arts, African-Americans are either greedy and shady or “mystical” Christians, a distrust of natural foods and medicine). Some non-explicit violence, a near-rape scene. show less
FBI Agent Raleigh Harmon is assigned a civil rights case following the death of a black man and a white cop. They fall from a roof of a factory during a rally. In the absence of witnesses who would be willing to come forward, Raleigh draws on her skills as a forensic geologist to solve the case.
In her debut novel, Giorello uses a film-noir tone of narration to tell her story. This character driven story is suspenseful with a solution that the reader most likely won't see coming. This book is recommended for fans of crime/mystery novels, but who don't like gruesome violence.
In her debut novel, Giorello uses a film-noir tone of narration to tell her story. This character driven story is suspenseful with a solution that the reader most likely won't see coming. This book is recommended for fans of crime/mystery novels, but who don't like gruesome violence.
Good story. Written in first person and I'm not crazy about the writing style.
Richmond VA FBI agent Raleigh Harmon. one black man and one white cop die falling from a roof.
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Awards
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Stones Cry Out
- Original publication date
- 2007
- Important places
- Richmond, Virginia, USA; Virginia, USA
- First words
- The dead man's mother lives on Castlewood Street, in a battered gray house guarded by a mean echo of "No Trespassing" signs.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)I begin to work.
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- Members
- 157
- Popularity
- 208,555
- Reviews
- 6
- Rating
- (3.60)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 5
- ASINs
- 2





























































