Rating: Summary: A Deadly Wrong Number Review: Henry Pierce is the Bill Gates of molecular computers of the future. As Chasing the Dime begins, Henry is about to apply for the patents on his research that will reshape the computing and the medical industries. He and his partner are gearing up for a presentation to a potential investor, a "whale," who can provide millions of dollars over the next few years to fund development of Proteus, their new delivery system. Henry's personal life is about to change for the worse, however, as his long term relationship with Nicole has just broken up and he has moved into a new apartment to begin living alone. The story looks pretty clear cut until Henry get his first phone message and realizes after a series of them, that he now has the number previously issued to a prostitute named Lily. As men continue to call for Lily, and he realizes that she appears to be missing, he become obsessed with finding her. He only has a short time before his presentation to the investor, but in that time he drops into an Alice in Wonderland type hole where nothing seems to fit. In his search for Lily, he is nearly killed by a couple of thugs, suspected of murder, and about to see his plans for his company destroyed. Although Henry is an unlikely detective, he is a scientist who can apply his reasoning skills to help him survive as his life appears to be unraveling. He is being set up, but by whom and why is what he has to find out. The plot is fascinating, well developed and suspenseful. Chasing The Dime doesn't have Harry Bosch at work, but it's Connelly at his best with great writing and a fun read to the end.
Rating: Summary: Far-fetched and Boring Review: I have read all of Michael Connelly's books and have found all of them to be compelling page-turners that I couldn't put down. Until now. I found "Chasing the Dime" to be both boring and far-fetched. Readers are expected to believe that Henry Pierce, a high-tech hotshot who is such a workaholic that his girlfriend has dumped him, will suddenly neglect his business and risk his reputation, his freedom, and ultimately his life hunting for a missing call girl whom he has never even met. Readers are further asked to believe that this irrational behavior was a predictable result of Pierce's unresolved guilt over his inability to save his sister from murder years earlier. Perhaps if Connelly had more fully developed his characters, this might have been believable. However, given the one-dimensional charaters Connelly has drawn, this behavior seems wildly improbable and certainly not predictable. As Pierce hunts for the missing Lilly, he becomes the prime suspect. Why? Because he's stupid. It's bad enough that readers are expected to believe that Pierce would set off on this search, but we are also supposed to believe that Pierce, already alert to the likelihood of foul play, would break into the missing girl's home and leave his fingerprints all over the place. The guy works in a lab. Hasn't he ever heard of gloves? If you want to read a good Michael Connelly book, give this one a miss and pick up A Darkness More Than Night. Or any of his other books.
Rating: Summary: For A Smart Guy, Hank Is Pretty Stupid Review: I thought using a character related to a character from a previous novel was a nice touch, but otherwise this book is too implausible and/or downright silly. Seems like Mr Connelly took a page (a bad page) from James Patterson and just churned one out here. Maybe he has not recovered from the loss of Harry Bosch.
Rating: Summary: insultingly stupid plot Review: Henry is supposedly a brilliant scientist on the brink of a major professional triumph. We're supposed to believe he's so unhinged by his girlfriend's dumping him, that when he sees a prostitute's photo on a website, he gets obsessed with her fate, morphs into an amateur detective, cleverly obtains private info about her from people who don't want to give it, breaks into her house, reads her mail, talks with her mother on the phone.....it isn't believable for an instant. And if the guy really did behave this way, he's an idiot, and who cares what happens to him. Skip this one, Connelly's worst book by far.
Rating: Summary: Curiosity Could Kill the Lab Rat Review: If the hero of "Chasing the Dime" were just another tough-talking PI, I'd be here complaining about the novel's clichéd plot. So what does best-selling crime writer Connelly do? He lets a world of intrigue, murder, and smut-peddling crash on the head of a lab rat who has no business snooping around alleyways or trading blows with thugs. .... You'll have to ignore your initial response (which will no doubt be of the "Why is this ...person doing this?" variety) and let Connelly warm up. With cleverly established motivations and riveting attention to detail, "Chasing the Dime" rewards your unhealthy curiosity very well by book's end.
Rating: Summary: Connelly is my favorite author but this is a weak effort! Review: I have read all of his work now and this is my least favorite. It is as if he lost pages 300-450 from his 600 page manuscript. The main character Pierce never is in real jeopardy of losing his life or losing his patented design for a molecular computer gadget thingie. Connelly does NOT develop any of the characters in this book, not Pierce, the helpful hooker, Pierce's defense atty, his hacker friend, his partner, or his head of security. If he did, he could have added much, much more dramatic tension figuring out who dun it. Instead when the end comes and the villian lifts off their mask, all you can think about was these points and how the author never really developed the possible villians or gave the reader a shot to figure it all out. A very hurried ending, he phoned this one in ala Stuart Woods.
Rating: Summary: improbable and boring Review: I like Michael Connelly's other books. This one is very bad. The plot is ridiculous, the characters are one dimensional, and the writing is painful. It is full of filler detail that seems to be there to get the word count up. I gave it one star because there was no way to give it none.
Rating: Summary: Terrible disappointment Review: I usually love Michael Connelly and was thrilled to see he had another book out. ... It was boring, the characters were [bad], and I didn't care enough to get through 50 pages. I tried skipping ahead but it never got any better. ...
Rating: Summary: Probably today's best mystery writer. I enjoyed it greatly. Review: I imagine the author likes to take a break from Harry Bosch. Harry has a history and is a dark and complex character. Henry Pierce is a new character but I imagine he'll be in another book. What's nice about this book is that it's not from the police point of view. The main character is the victim/suspect. Until this book I didn't notice the Stoicism in Connelly's novels. Maybe just now I'm recognizing it because I recently read some Stoics. Or maybe the modern American needs to be a Stoic to live without going insane. I also love the way Connelly makes slight references to his other books/characters in his latest books. I also enjoy the citations to music and other authors. The guy is just a treat. This also would make a great movie. Cast Keifer Sutherland as Henry Pierce.
Rating: Summary: No small change here! Review: Entrepreneur, Henry Pierce, is about to make a scientific break through in an experimental field called molecular computing. Henry is a workaholic, which is the cause of a breakup with co-worker. Henry is on his own and settling into a new apartment with new phone number. After plugging in his new phone, he finds he already has messages. However, the messages aren't for Henry, they're for Lilly. Who is Lilly? Henry assumes the calls are for the previous owner of the number and that they would stop but over the next few days, the calls continue. Henry questions some of the callers and finds out they're getting the number from a website called L.A. Darlings, an escort service. If Lilly were an escort, she would have to change her number on the website in order to keep doing business. Henry gets the feeling something has happened to Lilly because she seems to have just disappeared. Henry's curious nature and an event in his past, revolving around his sister, Henry begins to search for Lilly in hopes of helping her. This search leads him into the high-tech world of computers, hackers, scientists and the dark world of escorts and prostitution. There are surprising twists and Henry finds himself wondering who he can trust and who is truly a friend. Even the police wonder why Henry is so preoccupied with Lilly and suspect that he is the cause of her disappearance. Henry finds that he must analyze the situation as he would a scientific experiment - from the bottom up. People close to him say that there is a fine line between private investigation and private obsession. Connelly writes so well that I can almost picture the movie....The suspense kept me reading page after page long after I planned to go to sleep. Don't miss Michael Connelly's latest release "Chasing the Dime."
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