After the fireworks and the gunfire finally ends, they get a
call to respond to a nearby shooting near the intersection of Sunset Boulevard
and Gower Street. Back in the day, it was where day labors were picked up to
work as extras in Westerns. These days, a faded shopping plaza sits on the spot
with walled off studio lots nearby. Across the street is a string of auto
repair shops and aging apartment complexes. It is the gang territory of Las
Palmas 13 and they will soon learn that their victim was once in the Las Palmas
13.
Many years ago, Javier Raffa, bought his way out of the
gang. In the here and now, he was owner of an auto body shop. Each year for
NYE, he would throw a neighborhood party and put out a keg for all. The headshot
he took this night means he won’t be around to host another. The headshot was
also clearly not because of a round coming back to earth.
Somebody executed Raffa at close range and did it while
everyone else in the crowd was looking skyward. Even more interesting, the bullet
involved traces back to a cold case of one Detective Harry Bosch. While he is
even more of a hot potato due to his recent actions, there is no option but to reach
out to Bosch and discuss the situation. She needs his help and has to get it as
quietly as possible in order not to totally destroy her own career.
At the same time, it is also clear that Moore is going to be
zero help, at best, and a definite hindrance at worst. The two are paired as part
of the hunt for a pair of serial rapists known as the “Midnight Men.” The
horrible attitude expressed in so many ways by Moore reflects the ongoing malaise
affecting many in the LAPD. Moral is in the toilet that to the protests, the pandemic,
and various other factors that getting Moore and many other officers to do more
than the minimum is problematic. So, basically, Ballard is on her own on the rape
case and is pretty much on her own on the murder case because using Bosch comes
with limits and severe consequences.
But, like Bosch, Ballard only knows one way to do the job.
Screw the politics, build cases, and get the bad folks off the street. What follows
is an intense police procedural that works by the way of several different
storylines. Multiple cases and other matters are slowly brought together in a
read with a powerful ending. One would expect nothing else from the author and
he more than delivers in The Dark Hours.
The Dark Hours
Michael Connelly
https://www.michaelconnelly.com/
Little, Brown and Company
https://www.littlebrown.com/titles/michael-connelly/the-dark-hours/9780316256568/
November 2021
ISBN# 978-0-316-48564-7
Hardback (also currently available in audio and eBook
formats)
400 Pages
My reading copy came from the Downtown Branch of the Dallas Public Library System.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2021
4 comments:
Thank you, Kevin. I'm looking forward to reading or listening to The Dark Hours by one of my favorite authors. Great review.
Thank you.... and thank you for reading/commenting.
Great review, Kevin. I have only read a couple of books by Michael Connelly, the first two Bosch books. I will never catch up. I do have a copy of The Late Show, the first Renee Ballard book. I should move ahead to that one and then I could read the books in that series.
Sorry for the late approval of your comment. I just got notified this morning! (12/20)
I enjoy them a lot. There is a tv show for the Ballard books under development as well so reading them now before they do it could be a good idea.
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