Series: Book 2 in the Jack McEvoy series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: Los Angeles (Calif.), Journalists, Mystery & Detective, Serial murder investigation, Crime, General, Mystery fiction, Thrillers, Suspense, Computer industry, Fiction, Lang:en
Summary
Book Description
He focuses on Alonzo Winslow, a 16-year-old drug dealer in
jail after confessing to a brutal murder. But as he delves
into the story, Jack realizes that Winslow's so-called
confession is bogus. The kid might actually be innocent. Jack is soon running with his biggest story since The Poet
made his career years ago. He is tracking a killer who
operates completely below police radar--and with perfect
knowledge of any move against him. Including Jack's.
Michael Connelly and Janet Evanovich: Author
One-to-One
Evanovich: So dude,... Okay, you're back in
Florida. Do you ever get to the beach? And when and if you
get to the beach...is Harry Bosch with you? And what kind of
beachwear are you guys sporting? Flip-flops? Crocs? Speedo?
Board shorts?
Connelly: I go to the beach often on
weekends. Board shorts are required and I wear flip-flops
with the built in bottle opener. Comes in handy. In Florida
we rarely have waves, unless there is a hurricane in the
Gulf. So I have taken up paddle-boarding, which essentially
involves a big surfboard that you stand on and paddle. Still
a balancing act, but easier than surfing, and you don't need
waves.
Evanovich: What will a bookstore look like
in 2020? Will we all be downloading?
Connelly: Good question. Since it is only
eleven years from now, I think there will still be a solid
population of "old school" readers who need the book in their
hands. The question is, will they get it at a bookstore or
will we have a Kindle 9.0 device that manufactures a book for
you at home, complete with photo of author in a bomber
jacket.
Evanovich: If everybody is downloading in
2020 what the heck will we be signing on book tour? Body
parts? Kindle cases?
Connelly: I signed two Kindles yesterday.
One person asked me to leave room for signatures from you and
Dennis Lehane. So next time you're in Seattle she'll be in
your line.
Evanovich: Do you eat when you write? Beer
nuts? M&Ms? Just coffee? What keeps you from falling out
of the chair in a narcoleptic stupor?
Connelly: Have you ever seen what eating
Cheetos can do to a keyboard? I have to say I am addicted to
Coke. I always have a glass of it nearby. I eat a lot of
candy, too. Keeps me going. Smarties are a great writing
tool. I often need to raid my daughter's stash and then there
is trouble on the home front.
Evanovich: Are you a messy guy or a neat
guy? Do you keep clutter on your desk? In your head? Are
there soda cans and crumpled fast food wrappers rolling
around on the floor of your car?
Connelly: I keep a clean car but a desk that
gets progressively messier as I write a book. When I am
finished with the book, I clean up the desk—and eat all
the stray Smarties found under the paperwork. The clean desk
then promotes the start of the next book.
Evanovich: The new book,
Connelly: They let me do what I want. I like
writing about Harry Bosch and he's pretty popular, but
usually when I write a standalone it widens the audience a
bit.
Evanovich: Want to meet me in a bar in Ft.
Myers? Is that halfway?
Connelly: Name the place. Starred Review. Bestseller Connelly comments on the plight
of print journalism in a nail-biting thriller featuring
reporter Jack McEvoy, last seen in 2004's
The Narrows. When Jack is laid off from the
L.A. Times with 14 days' notice to tie up loose
ends, he decides to go out with a bang. What starts as a
story about the wrongful arrest of a young gangbanger for the
brutal rape and murder of an exotic dancer turns out to be
just the tip of an iceberg that takes McEvoy from the Nevada
desert to a futuristic data-hosting facility in Arizona. FBI
agent Rachel Walling, with whom he worked on a serial killer
case in 1996's
The Poet, soon joins the hunt, but as the pair
uncover more about the killer and his unsettling
predilections, they realize that they too are being hunted.
With every switch between McEvoy's voice and the villain's,
Connelly ratchets up the tension. This magnificent effort is
a reminder of why Connelly is one of today's top crime
authors.
8-city author tour. (May)
Amazon.com Review
Forced out of the Los Angeles Times amid the latest
budget cuts, newspaperman Jack McEvoy decides to go out with
a bang, using his final days at the paper to write the
definitive murder story of his career.
In this Amazon exclusive, we brought together
blockbuster authors Michael Connelly and Janet Evanovich and
asked them to interview each other. Find out what two of the
top authors of their genres have to say about their
characters, writing process, and more. Janet Evanovich is the
bestselling author of the
How I Write: Secrets of a Bestselling Author. Read
on to see Janet Evanovich's questions for Michael Connelly,
or
From Publishers Weekly
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