The furies Two Charlie Parker novels

John Connolly, 1968-

Book - 2022

"Chaos and murder arrive in Charlie Parker's hometown of Portland, Maine, with two connected crimes which prove to be among the most complicated of Parker's entire career"--

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Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Emily Bestler Books/Atria 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
John Connolly, 1968- (author)
Other Authors
John Connolly (-)
Edition
First Emily Bestler Books/Atria Books hardcover edition
Physical Description
504 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781982177003
  • The sisters Strange
  • The furies.
Review by Booklist Review

The new Charlie Parker novel is a twofer: two full-length novels under one set of covers. In The Sisters Strange (which began life as an e-book in 2020 and has been extensively rewritten and expanded), a nasty piece of worked called Raum Buker has inexplicably returned to Portland, Maine, and Charlie is concerned his reappearance might have dire consequences for the man's former lovers. In the title novel, Parker discovers that his clients, who hired him to protect them, are dangerously capable of looking after themselves; the question is, Who or what do they need to be protected from? And, further, why did they hire Charlie in the first place? Although these two novels are each shorter than the average Parker book, they are just as satisfying, with the same attention to character detail and the same elegant writing style. A must-read for the author's fans and a good introduction to the series for newbies.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In The Sisters Strange, the first of two novels in Connolly's exceptional 20th book featuring Portland, Maine, PI Charlie Parker (after 2021's The Nameless Ones), a lumber company owner fears that his girlfriend is at risk from her ex-lover, ex-con Raum Buker. Parker's probing leads him to believe that Buker may be connected with the theft of some valuable coins and drawn the ire of a murderous collector, who has already left bodies in his wake, including a man choked to death by coins forced down the victim's throat. In the title novel, set at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, Parker's approached for help by mobster Nate Sawyer's widow. After Sawyer was poisoned in jail, her husband's former criminal associates harass and assault her, believing she knows where he hid some stolen money. Vivid word pictures ("she caught an inkling of something in his eyes beyond mere annoyance, like the brief flash of a sharp blade before its owner thinks better of using it and sheaths it once again") and humor enhance suspenseful plotlines. This is an easy entry point for newcomers. Agent: Darley Anderson, Darley Anderson Literary. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

PI Charlie Parker is back in a pair of short novels with a ghostly twist. Parker, as his fans know, is an ex-cop and a PI whose wife, Susan, and daughter Jennifer were murdered, and Jennifer's ghost still haunts him. The characters in both these tales range from the offbeat to the literally Strange: The sisters Dolors and Ambar Strange run Strange Brews, a coffee shop in Portland, Maine, in the first novel, The Sisters Strange. Each yields her bed to a lowlife named Raum Buker, of whom Parker notes, "Gradually, like fecal matter falling down a drain, gravity brought Raum to Portland." Buker once had a mouth that "resembled the ruins of Dresden" but now has "installment-plan teeth" with what Parker calls a puppy-killing grin. Back in Pennsylvania, a "poisonous" old man named Edwin Ellerkamp is found choked to death, his mouth and throat engorged with coins dating as far back as the seventh and eighth centuries. The killer is a man of indeterminate age (Generations? Centuries?) named Kepler, who desperately seeks one particular coin--"with the right coin," he believes, "even gods could be bought." Kepler sees and feels himself rotting away as he reads decades-old newspapers, so maybe finding that precious coin will cure what ails him. In the second novel, The Furies, Parker reluctantly takes on the case of Sarah Abelli, the socially shunned widow of a femicidal killer. Meanwhile, Lyle Pantuff and Gilman Veale stay at Braycott Arms, a "shithole" hotel suitable for their ilk. The woman-hating Pantuff has "one of those faces that couldn't have drawn more cops if it were shaped like a donut and covered with sprinkles." At one point, he's "crouched like a gargoyle at the end of his bed." Veale keeps hearing a child, although none are allowed at Braycott Arms, and it creeps him out. No one can find any child, not even in the basement, so readers will be creeped out too. Maybe it's a ghost, because someone gets the shock of a lifetime. Connolly skillfully hints at the occult while keeping Parker grounded and sane. The author imbues both stories with melancholy and deft touches of dark humor. As with all the Charlie Parker books, this is fine fodder for crime fans. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.