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Chasing the Dime

Chasing the Dime

List Price: $7.99
Your Price: $7.19
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not his best work.
Review: I am a faithful Michael Connelly reader. I have read all of his works to date. I found this novel very hard to get wrapped up into. I did not find myself routing for the characters as in the past. P.S. - miss Harry very much.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Chasing the Fast Buck
Review: What a disappointment! I am a huge Connelley fan, I eagerly anticipate each new book. The last time he deviated from the Bosch or McCaleb genre with Void Moon it was a great stand alone change of pace.

Not so in this case. This book never gets off the dime! The characters are weak and thinly drawn. The dialogue is missing Connelley's usual crisp punch. This is an intriguing premise for a story line and one can only imagine what Connelley could have done with it if he had applied half the effort he puts into a Bosch novel.

If you want a book that takes no effort to read and a story that neatly wraps up in the last few pages, give this a try just don't expect the exquisitely plotted stories we have come to expect from Connelley.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Much better than the Northwest Airline travel magazine
Review: Connelly leaves the world of Lehane and Vachss and slides into the write-by-number realm usually populated by less talented hacks. The characters are straight off the writers' rack: techno-friend, hero with a painful past and hooker with a decent heart. The plot does turn, but so do the plots of most paperback thrillers I see in airport bookstores. The book isn't bad ... it's just nothing special. I can't remember ever thinking that about one of Connelly's books.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Another Great Novel
Review: Michael Connelly has once again proven that he is one of the best authors around. In Chasing the Dime Connelly combines cutting edge science with unbelievable suspense to produce a beautifully written thriller which will keep you reading late into the night. I will not repeat the book description here, but I will say you will be hard pressed to read a better novel this year. Connelly just keeps getting better with each book and I am looking forward to his next edition...

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Worth more than a plugged nickel
Review: Henry Pierce, rising star in the world's newest profession, molecular computer engineering, gets a new phone number. The number previously belonged to a girl named Lilly who apparently is engaged in the world's oldest profession.

Curiosity and a sense of personal guilt launch Henry on a quest to find this girl. It is a world of shadows and mirrors where things do not often lead to tidy answers. As Pierce descends deeper into the spiraling black hole, his entire universe is threatened.

This book lacks the dark introspection of Connelly's best works, but it reads swift and clean. Pierce is neither saint nor sinner, hero or villain, but the reader cares not only for his survival but the survival of his vision.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A post dot com high tech plot
Review: With the demise of the dot com era, how can a novelist invoke high technology as the backdrop? Well, nano tech is still promising; which one could interpret as it never hitting the levels of hype that the dot coms reached. This book gives a nice peep into the vagaries of fund raising for a nano tech startup. (Indeed, of any startup.) The frantic search for an angel investor; the gimlet eye on the burn rate; the negotiating over (percentage) points of equity that the angel can get for his money; anxiety over bad publicity queering a deal...

Connolly keeps the pace flowing. The protagonist is the chief scientist and founder of a startup, who find himself implacably manipulated by an unknown puppet master who seems to anticipate his reactions at every turn. Beatings, shootings, computer breakins, naked chicks. Gosh. An old fashioned whodunnit, updated for early 21st century Los Angeles.

I suggest this to you. Read this book. But while doing so, squint a little. Strip out the high tech references. Then see the beautiful murdered woman, the sleazy, live hooker, the vicious thugs, the confused, clever hero. All by the sun-drenched beaches and boulevards of Los Angeles. Can you find echoes of Raymond Chandler and the whole LA Noir scene?

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Henry the whiz kid, not Harry the cop - but classic Connelly
Review: Henry Pierce, a genius who may have just invented a molecular computer, moves into a new pad and discovers his new phone belonged to Lilly, a sexy brunette who advertised it on a web site. Lilly's rent, pager and PO Box are paid up but her phone isn't, and it was recycled to a new user in less than three months. Has Connelly completely abandoned his attention to detail, or is Henry being set up? If so, how and by whom?

Henry's sister was a hooker killed more than a decade before by the Dollmaker, a homicidal character in two early Harry Bosch novels. That leaves Henry with a compulsive need to find out what happened to Lilly. Though his actions are not those of a rational, intelligent man, Connelly presents the bizarre events that follow in a way that both holds your attention and makes you eager to see where he's going next. Detective Renner knows he's not getting the whole truth from Henry who, through a combination of his own missteps and other evidence that points his way, has become the number one suspect in Lilly's disappearance. Cody Zeller, a white hat hacker and buddy from Stanford, joins in to sniff out whatever information he can. When Henry follows that trail, he winds up in the clutches of a nasty porn promoter who travels with his silent enforcer, appropriately named six-eight.

Before his world completely crashes, Henry applies his super logical mind to cut through it all, setting up an exciting finish. It's different from a Harry Bosch book, for sure, and still a first rate story by Michael Connelly.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Disappointing...
Review: More and more, Michael Connelly's books seem to involve rather unbelievable plots and to require his characters to do things that are stupid, unbelievable, or just plain out of character. Why Henry Pierce, the protagonist of this new book, doesn't just change his phone number when he starts getting calls for a missing prostitute, is never really clear. Oh sure, Connelly attempts to provide an explanation in the form of a backstory involving his missing, then found dead, sister, but it never really rings true. It just doesn't successfully explain the obsession he has with finding the other girl, in the face of a couple of one-dimensional, paper thin bad guys who beat him up and hang him off the balcony of his twelfth floor apartment, or the impending visit of a financier who might be the savior he's been looking for, for his molecular computing firm. It's hard to believe that the main cop in the investigation puts his sights on Pierce, because, dontcha know, the Good Samaritan often turns out to be the perpetrator (I'm sure this is true, but it can't explain the extended harassment this guy gives Pierce). Then Pierce suddenly puts all the pieces together and suspects his ex-girlfriend must be behind it all (shades of Terry McCaleb suspecting that Harry Bosch is a killer in _A Darkness More Than Night_). It all rings false--something like the "idiot plot" of Roger Ebert, in which characters act in idiotic ways because the plot requires it, not out of believable motivations arising from their characters. Still, it was fast-moving and there is some interesting material about molecular computers and how they may change the world. But, ultimately, it's a real disappointment from a "master" like Connelly.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: High concept thriller.
Review: Michael Connelly's "Chasing the Dime" is a high octane, highly intense crime thriller. The plot accelerates from the cover to the conclusion at a furious pace.

Protagonist Henry Pierce is a Stanford educated computer genius, whose company is ready to patent a revolutionary molecular delivery system that could transform the medical profession. But if Henry can't get the multimillion-dollar funding shortly, his rivals will prevail. Henry's maniacal focus on perfecting the system has destroyed his personal life.

He has moved to an apartment. His new phone number previously belonged to an escort and is still posted on her web site. Messages for her accumulate to the point where he suspects something untoward has occurred.

Proving that no good deed goes unpunished, Henry is caught in an unimaginable conspiracy as he attempts to locate her and request the number be removed from the site. Henry is an ordinary man suddenly caught up in something with which he has no experience. The law of unintended consequences takes over and Henry learns that even paranoids have real enemies.

Mr. Connelly is the master of the sly plot twist. I fell for every red herring, misdirection and false lead---and did not figure out whodunit until it was painfully obvious. I was glued to the book from the compelling beginning to the action-packed finale. Do not miss this high concept thriller.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Connelly falls for techno-babble
Review: Michael Connelly is one of my favorite writers. I've read everything he's written, from the Harry Bosch story arc, to the one-off "The Poet".

Chasing the Dime was a major disappointment. Connelly pulls a Michael Crichton---dropping globs of sci-fi blather to distract from a storyline. I found myself skimming or skipping the parts to deal with science--just too boring/not interesting. The bio-tech angle already seems dated.

The main redeeming feature is Connelly continues building on his "LA world"--there's some familiar characters, including Janis Langweiser, resurfacing from "Angels Flight".


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