
His main character is Harry Bosch of the LAPD, but he has another player, too. A senior crime reporter for the LA Times newspaper. In this story, 'senior' means high salaried and expendable in an era of cost conscious newspaper owners. Jack McEvoy is on the 30 list, to be pink slipped, RIF'ed, but not until he trains his young (and cheaper) replacement and he has 2 weeks to do it, so this story flies right along.
Jack receives a call from a woman in Watts who says her 16yo boy did not commit a murder up in Santa Monica. After the most cursory glance at the case, Jack decides this might just be the big bang for his departure: saving a minor from a false charge.
Carver is the computer whiz kid who is in charge of data safety at a Mesa, AZ data farm and it's his job to stop intruders from getting inside. Get the name of the book now? He and a co-worker have quite the hobby. Chasing down innocent women, torturing, raping, then suffocating and stuffing them in a car trunk. Our 16yo kid Winslow ran off with a car not knowing a body was in the trunk.
Jack and his newbie cub reporter Angela sniff out little clues to Winslow's innocence, but Angela stumbles onto what appears to be a dead end website called TrunkMurder.com. This site alerts Carver that someone has picked up the trail. Jack goes to Vegas to interview a guy in prison for a very similar murder where Carver's partner makes an attempt on Jack, but Carver goes to LA and does way more than make an attempt on Angela.
Jack and Rachel, his former girlfriend and FBI agent (how convenient) are now on the trail trying to piece together bits of information to the killer's identity. They eventually get to Mesa and the eventual showdown with the resident evil genius, Carver. The Times keeps Jack on the story, smelling a Pulitzer when it all breaks.
Honestly, Connelly has never failed to deliver for me. His stories are rich in detail and character development. We feel McEvoy's pain at being fired and his possibilities for the future, Angela's excitement at her first big story, other people at the Times coming to grips with the changes in print journalism, Carver's genius and planning plus why he seems to be the way he is, the fear of those facing Carver at his worst. Great stuff. Not to be missed. No wonder it's still on some best seller lists. A+ in my book.
East Coast Don
p.s. the reference above to '30' is from old newspaper copy where '30' was placed at the end of the text to indicate the story was complete. To be on the 30 list meant a reporter was due to be fired.