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Bone Machine: A Joe Donovan Thriller (Joe Donovan Thrillers)
 
 

Bone Machine: A Joe Donovan Thriller (Joe Donovan Thrillers) [Kindle Edition]

Martyn Waites
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Characters struggle, sometimes heroically, against their compulsions and addictions in Waites's messy sequel to The Mercy Seat (2006). Journalist Joe Donovan's life fell apart after his six-year-old son vanished years ago, but now he's put together a substitute family of soiled misfits who want to learn how to trust and depend on each other while saving vulnerable people from exploitation. Besides going after a Serbian war criminal who's reinvented himself as a British vice lord, Donovan and his team become involved in the hunt for a sadistic serial killer who preys on young women. Along the way, they explore Newcastle's slums, where eastern European girls are a disposable commodity. What many of Waites's characters really want is proof that they're more than animals, mere bone machines. Even the lunatic who tortures girls to death is trying to prove that the voices in his head are real and that there is life beyond death. Watching these competing, terribly driven people is often unpleasant but also compelling, as readers are kept unsure whether the ones they care about can survive as human beings or not. (Mar.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

British crime novelist Waites’ latest reads like two different crime stories for nearly 350 pages, until the separate investigations of police and private operatives dovetail. Police are frantically searching for a serial killer who kidnaps and ritually murders university coeds, while the cops kidnap and shelter a young Bosnian woman forced into prostitution by a shadowy criminal boss who may be a Serbian war criminal. The novel is set in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, and the descriptions of an old city—once an engine of the Industrial Revolution—that is now gentrifying will please armchair travelers. The novel also features a number of well-drawn characters, major and minor, battling personal demons (liquor, drugs, past tragedies). And as the stories come together, the author fashions bloody and exciting resolutions. Each of the two different story lines is compelling, and each may have been worth its own novel. The attempt to cojoin them, unfortunately, never quite works, but if Waites may have overreached here, his ambition should be applauded. --Thomas Gaughan

Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 3114 KB
  • Publisher: Pegasus Books (November 1, 2007)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B002BA54K8
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #506,948 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars A Long Winding Homerun, January 16, 2012
By 
This review is from: Bone Machine: A Joe Donovan Thriller (Joe Donovan Thrillers) (Kindle Edition)
While a book first published in 2007 does not seem like a common choice for a book review I challenge you to name one book by Martyn Waites. Stop Googling. If you named one you are likely from England, if not, you are like everyone else who is missing out.

Bone Machine is one-part To Catch a Serial Killer and one-part Public Service. The Historian captures his prey, young attractive women, who he ritualistically rapes and tortures, but not before he sews their eyes and mouth shut. His motives are left unknown for 450-pages, but once the dots are connected it is a rather dark dive into psychosis. His victims of course lead the police, who like most novels are portrayed as bumbling alcoholics and only have sights set on an arrest, not stopping a killer.

Newcastle private investigator Joe Donovan leads a gang of misfits on a case that leads them straight into the heart of the murder investigation. Donovan is the central character to Waites P.I. series, similar to America's Alex Cross series in many ways.

While I compare him to Patterson because of the overall type of crime portrayed in his story, Waites is clearly unique as a noir writer and seen as anything but a rip off.

While the book takes you on a colorful descriptive journey throughout Newcastle, England I only have one reservation with the book. The story fo the Historian is the main background of the book, but much of Joe Donovan's crew is searching for and defending a woman sold into the international sex trade who can ID a wanted war criminal. Waites ultimately connects the two cases, only very loosely through a minor character that really could have been anyone. It almost comes together as a curious coincidence of chance rather than a major connection of crime.

What it really amounts to is two very good short stories tied into the same book with the investigative team handling them at the same time. Instead of two independent short stories, Waites unfortunately makes this a book with 100-pages of intense introduction of both crimes and 100-pages of non-stop conclusion with 300-pages in the middle trying to piece together two different story arcs that grow slow and stagnant at times. Had it been a collection of two separate 250-page stories they would have been a much faster read and more enjoyable saga. Though crossing story arcs seem to be Waites writing style so I don't expect that to change in futue.

As much as the genetic fussing of two stories may have seemed negative it really had little effect on my enjoyment of the story, more so how much the book gripped me. Waites offers fans of James Patterson a deeper and more descriptive read, if you have read Patterson you know exactly what I mean. But you will find in Waites work the same dark and brutal crimes that Patterson frequently explored in his earlier Cross novels.

There are several other books in the Joe Donovan Thriller line and I have already checked two out of the local library. I highly recommend checking out his work, but I will drop one follow-up caveat. Be ready to open your mind to a different culture, as much as England is our neighbor they still have a different culture at times. Be ready to learn some new phrases, accept alternate spellings and be willing to research a bit of government process to fully understand the book, or you can just read over the confusing terminology and accept it for what it is, different. But if cops without guns, misspelled pyjamas and futbol are going to make you gripe then stay in your own secluted world that crime can not happen outside of America in a novel.
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars tense gritty Noir, February 12, 2008
In Newcastle, the body of the mutilated Ashley Malcolm was found in a burial ground. Her eyes and mouth were sewed shut apparently when she still lived and cuts are all over her body. DS Turnbull and DI Nattrass believe her boyfriend Michael Nell killed her, as he has a history of violence against women. Janine Stewart thinks otherwise although she knows her client is a flash tempered lout. She refuses to believe he would perform a ritual killing; if Michael murdered his girlfriend she would be battered not stitched. Michael also claims an alibi.

Janine hires Joe Donovan to affirm Michael's alibi. The case seems simple to Joe until he and his team start tracking the alibi. This leads them to an evil world where vicious thugs run a child-trafficking ring and a prostitution ring with kids as the merchandise. Shook to his core, Joe still wonders what happened to his six-year-old son who vanished three years ago and could have been for sale by these punks. Soon a second death occurs as the serial killing Historian taunts the cops with clues from the city's heritage.

Though the culprit comes out of serial killer casting, BONE MACHINE is a tense gritty Noir that deeply explores human trafficking to the point that the hero and the Historian are left out much of the first half of tale. Readers who appreciate an extremely dark crime thriller that looks at the evil people do to those vulnerable is interred in their bone marrow will want to read the BONE MACHINE and other Donavan thrillers like MERCY SEAT, not reviewed by me.

Harriet Klausner
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