Home :: Books :: Mystery & Thrillers  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers

Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Underkill: An Allen Choice Novel

Underkill: An Allen Choice Novel

List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $16.47
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great follow up
Review: I hate it when a series keeps doing the same thing but this Allen Choice mystery doesn't do anything like that. I liked the first one, and this is better written. The mystery isn't about Allen's family. It's just part of the things shaking him up. If you've ever been through a break-up you'll identify with what Allen is going through. It's very well done how this sequel is totally different but is still about Allen. I can't wait to see what's next.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Standout Well Written Mystery
Review: I'm a literature grad student, and I've had the opportunity to follow Chang's writing for some time now. His first two novels were clearly attempts to delineate the racial dynamics in America (Asian/African American as well as class issues), and with this Allen Choice series he seems to be trying to write about Korean Americans in a similar but almost subterranean way. He is writing about an Americanized Korean American man as a Private Investigator, a man who looks into the grit of American lives (Korean American lives in Over the Shoulder, and now the L.A. Underground and ecstasy scene in Underkill) all the while investigating his own life, both external and internal life. Allen Choice has no ethnic or racial ties--he's afloat and alone. He actually has NO ties (familial or relationship), which on some level echoes Chang's previous novels. The archetype of the PI is the isolated man, and here Allen Choice is isolated on so many levels it's dizzying, because family, race, profession, and now relationships have served to separate him from conventional society. Chang has taken the model of the PI and used this to exploit his other themes of alienation. This takes not only mystery fiction but Asian American fiction to new levels. I highly recommend this series for readers looking for exciting, well-written stories with a bit more substance than the usual genre entertainments.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Standout Well Written Mystery
Review: Korean-American executive protection expert Allen Choice has doubts about his failing romance with Hispanic reporter Linda Maldonaldo while concerned with his weak business. The adrenaline that fueled the beginning of his relationship with Linda (see OVER THE SHOULDER) is gone along with the thrill. The lack of executive protection clients in the Bay area has forced Allen to accept sleazy sleuthing that he knows is way below his skill level, but allows him to eat.

Adding to his depression is his feelings of guilt for not being there when Linda's brother died in a drug-related car crash. To ease his remorse Allen travels to Malibu to be there for his girlfriend. Already feeling like a fish out of water, instead of finding a family mourning a tragedy, Allen walks into a nasty Internet child pornography venture that could leave him as the next accident victim.

Readers who took delight in Allen's first tale will enjoy this story, but will quickly realize that it is not quite on a level with its predecessor. Perhaps it is the change of location, but Allen seems out of place in Malibu because he fits so well in San Francisco. Still readers will appreciate his self-deprecating doubts about himself and Linda, and enjoy his latest investigation just not the first choice.

Harriet Klausner

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Solid choice of the mystery
Review: Korean-American executive protection expert Allen Choice has doubts about his failing romance with Hispanic reporter Linda Maldonaldo while concerned with his weak business. The adrenaline that fueled the beginning of his relationship with Linda (see OVER THE SHOULDER) is gone along with the thrill. The lack of executive protection clients in the Bay area has forced Allen to accept sleazy sleuthing that he knows is way below his skill level, but allows him to eat.

Adding to his depression is his feelings of guilt for not being there when Linda's brother died in a drug-related car crash. To ease his remorse Allen travels to Malibu to be there for his girlfriend. Already feeling like a fish out of water, instead of finding a family mourning a tragedy, Allen walks into a nasty Internet child pornography venture that could leave him as the next accident victim.

Readers who took delight in Allen's first tale will enjoy this story, but will quickly realize that it is not quite on a level with its predecessor. Perhaps it is the change of location, but Allen seems out of place in Malibu because he fits so well in San Francisco. Still readers will appreciate his self-deprecating doubts about himself and Linda, and enjoy his latest investigation just not the first choice.

Harriet Klausner

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great read!
Review: The wait is over...I was thrilled to see a follow-up to Over the Shoulder and read Underkill over the weekend. It's a real page-turner, and Chang deftly avoids the usual cliches associated with raves and drug use. I especially enjoyed the human dimensions of the story - the family and personal relationships, and the way Chang interweaved these elements into an already strong plot. I usually find myself skipping sentences, paragraphs or even pages of text when authors feel compelled to show off their research for a novel, drowning us in unnecessary details; Chang's style is well-balance though, and Underkill never gets bogged down like that. Chang is a talented author and I hope to see more soon!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Another Knock-Out of a Mystery
Review: This is a series that continues to improve and reward the reader. Leonard Chang is writing some of the best current detective fiction now available in these books. And it doesn't hurt that he's also able to address issues of race and alienation at the same time. _Underkill_ brings back reluctant investigator Allan Choice to look into the apparently accidental death of his girlfriend's younger brother. The investigation takes Choice into the underground rave scene and competition between ecstasy dealers, which may have had something to do with the death. At the same time, Allan's relationship with his girlfriend, Linda, seems to be unravelling and try as he might, he can't figure out how to prevent it. This is an excellent, fast-paced mystery that left me wanting more--Bring on Book #3!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This is a superb new series!
Review: This series is turning out to be one of the best and most interesting ones I've read, and I've read a lot of them. I love Michael Connelly and Dennis Lehane and Sue Grafton and a bunch of others, and this one definitely ranks up there because Allen Choice is a very realized and intriguing character. I was trying to tell a friend about this series and found it hard to describe because it's so centered on the character instead of just the mystery. It's almost like this is a regular novel about an investigator and so there's naturally a mystery because it's his job, but it's not about the mystery...it's about the guy himself. The writing is awesome.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: in depth look at Allen Choice
Review: Unlike Over the Shoulder, this installment of Allen Choice moves us into different and deeper terrain: we get a piercing look at his emotions as his life and relationships fray. What's missing is the broader sociological scope of Over the Shoulder, but what's added is the in-depth look at Choice. It's as if the author decided to go inward rather than outward, which seems like an odd but interesting choice (no pun intended) for a thriller. I also missed the philosophical thoughts, but they have been replaced by an investigation into his ideas of relationships. This is turning out to be a very unique mystery series. I think James Sallis's mysteries are similar, though of course different in terms of character and style.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: So when's the next Allen Choice novel coming out??????
Review: Wow. I was up all night reading this. I loved Over the Shoulder, and found Underkill to be equally engrossing. Chang does an incredible job of writing literary fiction (his use of language is just gorgeous) that's propelled by a real, page-turner plot. I wish more books combined being this well-written with being this suspenseful.

Choice makes a great reluctant protagonist, and his thoughtful, candid narration is enough to make this book worth reading by itself (even without the raves, car chases, and gun fights!).


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates