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Void Moon/ Unabridged

Void Moon/ Unabridged

List Price: $39.98
Your Price: $26.39
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Interesting
Review: This story (not apart of the Harry Bosch series) was interesting and that's about it. It had lots of information in how high tech hotel robberies are carried out. But the story line was ho-hum. I guess I have come to expect greater things from this author.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Don't void this one out
Review: Void moon may not be the one that you should really start off on. If you read "void moon" without having already read the other "Harry Bosch" detective series or the non-Harry Bosch novel "poet", you'd probably end up with the feeling that MC is not a very imaginative writer. Actually, it's far from the truth as here MC has deliberately wrote a down to earth novel which pretty much runs like a very standard movie thriller. In fact, even for a movie, it certainly is a very predictive story. This is not to say the book is bad, it's just that MC could have been a bit more imaginative with a little more twists and turns.

The Story is basically about an ex-con "Cassie Black" who earlier convicted on manslaughter charges (for indirectly being responsible for the death of her partner-in-crime/boyfriend Max Freeling) has just got out on parole due to her good behaviour and good intent to start over. But She is continuously haunted by her past. Max was her mentor and along with Max they were a great team pulling off robberies in casinos, specially targeting high rollers in Las Vegas who had ostensibly won large amounts of cash. For a reason I will not reveal, so as to not spoil the book, Cassie decides to do one last big con so that she can have the money to escape to Tahiti which she has been planning for quite long. This means she will be going back to the life of crime that got her in jail in the first place but she is prepared to take her changes for her last shot at her only surviving dream.

The book is about this last con gone wrong. And this con supposedly goes wrong because it happens at the time of "void moon" that is the time the moon is astrologically between two houses or in other words, inauspicious time. Cassie is told to avoid the void moon time-slot during the time she is pulling off the heist. This she is told by the brain-behind-the-plan-colleague who gets her this project in the first place.

After she pulls it off, she comes to know that she actually stole more money than they were counting on and this money was actually a high-stakes shady pay-off. This gets an assassin called Karp on Cassie's trail. Karp is the sort of guy man for hire who makes all your problems go away. From here it is a chase movie, where the karp is nearing Cassie and along the way a lot of people get killed. MC makes Karp kill almost anyone he finds on his travel tour leading to Cassie Black. I don't really think, a real assassin would draw attention to himself in this manner by just pulling off unjustified killings which have no purpose or are not totally mandatory to the purpose of the job at hand which for Karp is "to get the stolen money back and offcourse to get rid of Cassie + those directly involved" . There is a Predictable cliché ending with a cheap twist put at the end. But really, it didn't work for me.

No surprises here, just a very basic story. You can read all the other MC novels first. Afterwards, probably out of curiosity you can probably scan throught this novel, that's if you want to read every MC on the shelf.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Another outstanding Connelly story...
Review: These books--thrillers, crime novels, whatever you want to the call genre--are often cliche ridden, filled with hollow characters and dialogue, and have all too neat endings. Connelly avoids all of that. He writes exceptionally well and the characters here are fleshed out and vivid. I have not read any of the Harry BOsch novels; sticking only to COnnelly's stand alone works. This is a very interesting story; with a compelling lead character. Connelly writes Cassie as a strong, flawed, and very real woman. Karch is a wonderful foil for her. I wasn't thrilled with the use of the little girl in the climax, but suprising it avoids most cliches. I particularly liked the subtle twists in the last 75 pages. Connelly does not stretch his scenes. He lets them stand on their own power. Another strength...the last chapter. It is not a "neat" ending, but a good one. One note--beware how the publisher is trying to wring every last dollar out of you. Try not to buy the "trade" paperback; the bigger and more expensive one. IS it worth the extra 6 bucks? I don't think so. I hate when they are that transparent in their attempts to make money. Oh, well. That isn't Connelly's fault.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Cassie Black- a unique character
Review: The unique thing about this book is that the main character is a criminal, kind of a "bad guy". BUT- you like her. You sympathize with her, you enjoy her.

Void Moon takes place in Las Vegas and is about Cassie Black, who was recently released from prison and who is now on parole for involuntary manslaughter. The death took place while she and her partner were robbing a man who had just won thousands, only to find that a crime they were veterans at, went awry. Now, struggling between a "normal" life and the fast-paced exciting life of crime is where Cassie finds herself. Then enters an offer to make money she's never known, in a crime that's taylored for her...but the gamble is huge- will she survive or ruin her life trying?

Void Moon is not my favorite of Connelly's, but I certainly enjoyed it. It is fast-paced, and with a setting like Las Vegas, the tapestry is rich and filled with quirky and memorable characters. Definitely be sure to check out other books by Connelly in his Harry Bosch series- including Angels Flight and A Darkness More Than Night.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: No other book like it!
Review: This book is absolutely his best, and one of the best I have ever read. It will grab you from page one, and hold you to the very end. You'll never guess how this one turns out. It combines fabulous suspense, a tug at the heart, outrageously delicious plot twists, and characters that are just cliche enough (intentionally so, I'm sure) to make you shake your head and smile. A true treasure of this genre.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Somewhat anticlimactic
Review: This is a decent read with no real twist. I found myself not wanting to finish the book at times, but did anyway. I would not recommend this book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Caper to End All Capers
Review: From page one, Cassie Black's story intrigues. Connelly masterfully hints at a past that while memorable is also painful and retribution seeking.

Grant you, Connelly does not have the luxury of developing Cassie's character over a series of books as he does in his Harry Bosch novels, but within the 300+ pages, the reader gets a satisfactory portrayal of a woman in transition.

Cassie, an ex-con, works in a Porsche dealership in the L.A. that Connelly uses as a backdrop in most of his novels. The routine of her job combined with her regular parole visits jolt suddenly when she discovers that another far more important and unrevealed portion of her routine will be disrupted. In an instant, the old need for what Connelly describes as "outlaw juice" hits her, and she decides that instead of the quiet life of the reformed thief, she desires nothing more than to go back to her old life of precarious excitement in Las Vegas. She makes the connections she needs with the precision of a Swiss watch, and within days a job is set into motion that places Cassie in the path of Jack Karch, one of Connelly's sleazier villians in an already excellent portfolio of the underworld's sleaziest characterizations.

I'll admit that when the story switches from the third person Cassie Black viewpoint to that of Jack Karch, I was a little disappointed as the direction in which the novel heads becomes easier to track. But Connelly keeps up the pace and I found myself reading page after page until at 3 AM I finished the book and decidedly spent the ensuing day happily sleep deprived. Once Jack rears his ugly head, the story catapults into a satisfying tale of "the caper" with all the adrenaline inducing charge of film stories like "The Italian Job" or "The Thomas Crown Affair" told in the more world weary underbelly of Las Vegas and L.A. while still maintaing its ability to depict a complex animal like Karch and reveal all his Freudian impulses in a complete and unboring fashion.

I will not reveal the plot; its certainly provides enough entertainment for anyone who enjoys probing the psyches of the amoral within the confines of a fast-paced popular novel. While the overall outcome of the story could be worked out by the reader, the manner in which it all is accomplished is successfully employed by Connelly and the outcome provides an entertaining respite from the reader's routine world. Recommended to all who like a quick well-done suspenseful read where there is no need to lessen the pace to look up a word in the dictionary.


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