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The Black Angel (Charlie Parker Mysteries)
 
 

The Black Angel (Charlie Parker Mysteries) [Kindle Edition]

John Connolly
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (50 customer reviews)

Kindle Price: $7.99 includes free wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
Sold by: Simon and Schuster Digital Sales Inc
This price was set by the publisher

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

The first 60,000 copies of Irish thriller master Connolly's fifth Charlie Parker novel [arrived] signed, and with a CD. (The latter [featured] tracks that either [played] a role in his darkly atmospheric novels, or [were] favored by their characters: everything from Kate Bush to Neko Case.) But fans won't need that much enticement to pick up his latest set of intricately plotted forays into the violent world of the undead. Parker has settled in Maine, still mourning his murdered wife and child while attempting devotion to his new partner, Rachel, and their infant daughter, Sam. At Sam's christening, Parker's sometime collaborator Louis receives an uninvited guest from New York: his aunt, distraught at the disappearance of her daughter, Alice, an NYC prostitute. It doesn't take much to draw an ambivalent Parker back into the game, and soon he's in New York and stumbling onto clues regarding the Black Angel, a statue associated with a Czech ossuary and sought by various evildoers for centuries—or perhaps a living, bloodthirsty spirit. Trips to the Czech Republic and elsewhere ensue as Parker seeks to know this latest face of evil. Connolly delivers a very intense blend of Parker's authentic soul searching and of his own distinctive, moody grue.(June)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

In the fifth Charlie Parker novel, the private investigator, recently remarried (after the murders of his wife and child), has been trying to pull his life back together. But when his partner's cousin goes missing, Parker can't avoid getting back in the game. And when he realizes the young woman's disappearance is connected to an older, darker mystery, he once again is forced to risk life and sanity in a desperate good-versus-evil battle. Connolly, who resides in Ireland but writes about the U.S. like he's lived there all his life, once again blends the -private-eye novel and the supernatural thriller in a way that's altogether unique. Parker himself, one of the genre's more disturbed heroes, is a complex creation whose depths have still, even through five novels, been barely explored. The Charlie Parker novels are not for everyone (especially those who like their private-eye yarns unencumbered by philosophical or theological overtones), but Connolly has been building a cadre of devoted fans who clamor for his edgy take on the genre. David Pitt
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 758 KB
  • Publisher: Atria Books; Har/Com edition (June 1, 2005)
  • Sold by: Simon and Schuster Digital Sales Inc
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B000FCK6R0
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (50 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #36,495 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

50 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (50 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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36 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Myth and Mayhem, September 27, 2005
By 
Untouchable (Sydney, NSW Australia) - See all my reviews
The 5th book in the Charlie Parker series, The Black Angel is probably the most ambitious work that author John Connolly has undertaken yet. Lurking behind the seemingly mundane, though by no means less disturbing, murder of a New York prostitute lies a more horrifying tale of evil featuring fallen angels and their insidious spread on earth. This is a compelling book that combines the modern day thriller with the dank realm of the myth and supernatural with spine tingling results.

The story opens with a presentation of the myth that will drive the entire story. This myth involves The Black Angels known as Ashmael and Immael who gloried in the death and destruction that they brought down on the earth in the form of wars, rape and murder. But then Immael was confronted by a Cistercian monk and in the ensuing battle fell into a vast vat of molten silver where he was trapped, cast as a silver statue, and hidden. Ever since, Ashmael his brother has been searching for the map detailing where Immael was held. The map had been separated into fragments and scattered around the world. Should Immael be freed, an unthinkable fury would be unleashed on the world.

Charlie Parker is a Maine private investigator who is still haunted by the death of his wife and daughter with a guilt that refuses to be diminished. He now has another baby daughter, Sam, and a girlfriend, Rachel, who he loves very much, but the strain of his dangerous job plus his inability to move on in life is taking its toll on their relationship.

This strain is multiplied when, at his daughter's christening no less, he is caught up in the disappearance and possible murder of Louis' cousin Alice. Louis is Charlie's murderous, gay business partner, an extremely dangerous man from whom Rachel maintains a disapproving distance. Rightly or wrongly, Charlie immediately joins in the search for Alice leaving his girlfriend and daughter at home putting into doubt yet another relationship.

The book separates into two stories here. The first is the investigation of Alice's disappearance as Charlie, Louis and Louis' partner Angel hit the streets of New York to try to retrace Alice's last known steps. The retribution that Louis is known for will come swiftly and brutally when he founds out the person responsible for any harm that has been done to his cousin. This part of the story is your standard hardboiled thriller filled with street violence, crime and fast-paced action.

Now enter the Other side of the story. We know that the "person" behind Alice's murder is a man known as Brightwell, a huge monstrous man with a frightening disregard for human life and an unquenchable need to kill. But more frightening about this man is that he appears to have supernatural powers that he uses to gruesome effect on his victims. Brightwell leads a secret group of people known as "Believers" who are all on the hunt for the elusive fragments of the missing map. When they track down a piece they go to any lengths to acquire it, with devastating results.

Their mistake is unintentionally made by drawing Parker and his partners into the mix, although it seems that there will be no stopping Brightwell and his evil plans, even after Brightwell senses that there is something special about Parker, a terrible truth that could go a long way towards explaining his tragic past.

The Black Angel is a superbly satisfying thriller that delves deeply into mythology, dragging us back to the 15th century with stirring historical stories before taking us to the present and the horrifying evil that has resulted. From European monasteries to grim ossuaries and vast monuments to the dead, talk of apocrypha and the Book of Enoch to the creepy hobbyists who deal in the sale of human bones and the statues from which they are made this is a complex, yet rather creepy book.

For the fans of the series, there are numerous references to events from earlier books as well as returning characters, heroes and villains alike. While it is obviously aimed at readers who have experienced the earlier books, The Black Angel has such immense scope that it can stand on its own and still provide immense entertainment.

John Connelly has created a story of enormous depth and has been uncompromising in the amount of detail and research that has gone into the historical references. He has richly drawn his characters filling them in with alarming detail to create some of the most fully-fleshed villains I have ever encountered. He has then thrown a chilling other-worldly aspect over the top of all of this that nastily creeps into nightmares, is vividly descriptive and will stain your imagination for weeks to come.

At over 500 pages, The Black Angel is long by today's standards, but it is a story that simply flies by as you are lost in the dark underworld of the hunt for the fallen angel. Stout of heart and strong of stomach will devour this supernatural thriller of the highest order.
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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Mystery of Biblical Proportion, July 30, 2005
By 
Gary Griffiths (Los Altos Hills, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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Laced with liberal references to previous works, "The Black Angel", fifth in John Connolly's private investigator Charlie "Bird" Parker series of thrillers, is by far the author's most complex and ambitious effort. While Connolly's rich and lyrical prose always carries an element of the supernatural, "Angel" treads without apology into a heavily theological and mystical territory featuring allegorical fallen angels and the cult that worships them. A young prostitute has disappeared in New York, and Parker is called upon by the mother to try to find her. It turns out that the prostitute is also the niece of Parker's sometime partner Louis deepening, if possible, Louis' usual brand of malevolence. The trail leads Parker and team into a richly convoluted maze constructed of 15th century monasteries, secret crypts and creepy ossuaries, cadaverous art dealers, and the "apocrypha", ancient canonical text considered too controversial to be included in the standard books of the Bible. While unraveling the dual mysteries of Louis' niece and the legendary fallen "Black Angel", Parker confronts perhaps his most formable adversary yet, the mysterious and repugnant Brightwell, a corpulent villain as ageless as he is obese.

If you've never read John Connolly, "The Black Angel" would not be a great place to start. Neither Parker nor the Louis/Angel team of hired mayhem are in the best spirits, each haunted by their own guilts and ghosts of the past. Notwithstanding, Connolly delivers another unconventional and offbeat PI thriller, at the same time brutal and beautifully written. A must read for the Connolly fan, while the uninitiated would be better off starting with "Every Dead Thing".
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Riveting, June 25, 2005
By 
Dorothy Welsh (Philadelphia, PA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Mystery, thriller, suspense with hints of the supernatural (or super disturbed,) The Black Angel will lure you into a world where evil brushes casually by on busy city streets, and it will keep you there way past your bedtime.

From Maine to New York City to Sedlec, a place where human remains have been transformed into works of art, John Connolly masterfully paints evocative portraits of villains who are obvious, and those who are not, as he explores the interconnectedness of all things - good and evil, living and dead, the divine and the fallen. Torn between those in need and those he needs, Charlie Parker, Connolly's haunted hero, seeks redemption in the face of evil - head on and with dark humor, at one point likening an FBI agent attempting to cross a snarled New York Street to "federally funded Frogger." Go ahead, cross the street with Charlie - you won't regret entering his fascinating, darkly funny and eminently chilling realm, guided by an author with one of the most distinctive and literate voices in contemporary fiction.
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More About the Author

I was born in Dublin, Ireland in 1968 and have, at various points in his life, worked as a journalist, a barman, a local government official, a waiter and a "gofer" at Harrods department store in London. I studied English in Trinity College, Dublin and journalism at Dublin City University, subsequently spending five years working as a freelance journalist for The Irish Times newspaper, to which I continue to contribute, although not as often as I would like. I still try to interview a few authors every year, mainly writers whose work I like, although I've occasionally interviewed people for the paper simply because I thought they might be quirky or interesting. All of those interviews have been posted to my website, http://www.johnconnolly.co.uk.

I was working as a journalist when I began work on my first novel. Like a lot of journalists, I think I entered the trade because I loved to write, and it was one of the few ways I thought I could be paid to do what I loved. But there is a difference between being a writer and a journalist, and I was certainly a poorer journalist than I am a writer (and I make no great claims for myself in either field.) I got quite frustrated with journalism, which probably gave me the impetus to start work on the novel. That book, Every Dead Thing, took about five years to write and was eventually published in 1999. It introduced the character of Charlie Parker, a former policeman hunting the killer of his wife and daughter. Dark Hollow, the second Parker novel, followed in 2000. The third Parker novel, The Killing Kind, was published in 2001, with The White Road following in 2002. In 2003, I published my fifth novel - and first stand-alone book - Bad Men. In 2004, Nocturnes, a collection of novellas and short stories, was added to the list, and 2005 marked the publication of the fifth Charlie Parker novel, The Black Angel. In 2006, The Book of Lost Things, my first non-mystery novel, will be published.

I am based in Dublin but divide my time between my native city and the United States, where each of my novels has been set.

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