Wednesday, July 7, 2021

 The Unquiet by John Connolly

Monopoly Book Challenge - Community Chest #2 - Your favorite genre
Series


After going more than a little paranormal in the last couple books in the series, Connolly came back to a more traditional murder mystery/suspense-thriller (don't worry there's still some supernatural stuff going on).

One of the things I like best about Connolly's writing is his descriptive writing: "...a large woman with a pile of big black hair balanced precariously on her head like dirty ice cream on a cone....she looked old, but age had not dimmed her affection for cosmetics or hair dye, even if it deprived her of some of the skills required to apply both without making the final effect look less like an act of vanity than an act of vandalism."

"She wet her lips, as though her system was trying to silence her by drying out her mouth."

As in prior novels, Connolly does detailed historical research. I learned some interesting Maine facts such as it being the homeplace of candlepin bowling


And the dark history of Maine's largest prison and its Special Management Unit which doles out questionable punishments.

Summary from Goodreads: Daniel Clay, a once-respected psychiatrist, has gone missing. His daughter insists that he killed himself after allegations surfaced that he had betrayed his patients to foul and evil men -- but when a killer obsessed with uncovering the truth behind his own daughter's disappearance comes seeking revenge, long-forgotten secrets begin to emerge. Hired by Dr. Clay's daughter to protect her from the predator on the loose, tortured and ingenious private detective Charlie Parker finds himself trapped between those who want the truth to be revealed and those who will go to any length to keep it hidden.

Quotes: "The law doesn't require truth, only the appearance of it. Most cases simply rest on a version of it that's acceptable to both sides. You want to know what the only truth is? Everybody lies."





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