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26 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
The (fill in the blank) Way, September 12, 2007
This review is from: The Chicago Way (Hardcover)
This is an entertaining, good book, but the buzz and reviews around it overstate the case a bit. I wouldn't call it great, or classic.
The plot is fairly formulaic, and not just in the sense that it follows the classic 'hard boiled' narrative structure. Readers of fiction in the genre will find that it holds few surprises(Raymond Chandler meets CSI meets David Mamet?). I found the characters to be derivative... for example the ex cop private eye who was wronged AND has a dark secret AND "boxed for money" AND reads the classics. (Marlowe meets Spenser meets Sam Spade meets Poirot?)
The "sense of place" that several reviewers have mentioned positively felt more gimmicky than novel. The setting and the story don't really seem interdependent. The book could have easily been called the Philadelphia Way, the Boston Way, the Brooklyn Way, etc, by changing a few pages of text. By contrast, novels like James Ellroy's "LA Quartet" really couldn't have been sent anywhere else.
I finished the book not really caring about the characters; and possessed of an intense desire to re-read some of the source material.
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27 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Harvey takes readers on a trip to the mean streets of Chicago, August 22, 2007
This review is from: The Chicago Way (Hardcover)
Chicago PI Michael Kelly is sitting in his office, attempting to compile a list of the ten greatest moments in Cubs history, when his ex-partner, John Gibbons, walks through the door. After exchanging pleasantries with Kelly, Gibbons gets down to business---he's come to hire Kelly to look into a case that's haunted the retired police officer for nearly a decade, the rape of a young woman that he maintains was covered up by his superiors. Intrigued by Gibbons' story, Kelly agrees to take the case.
Hours later, Gibbons is found dead by the Navy Pier, shot twice in the stomach. Now a person of interest in the Gibbons homicide, Kelly has added incentive to solve the case the dead man hired him to investigate. Kelly throws himself into the investigation, but answers are elusive--to bring Gibbons' killer to justice, Kelly must dig deep into the mystery surrounding the assault of a young girl named Elaine Remington, a cold case neither the killer nor the police are interested in reopening.
How much you ultimately enjoy The Chicago Way will depend on your expectations going in. If you're looking for something new and original, this may not be your book. If you're looking for a prime example of a hard boiled crime novel, by all means pick this up--Harvey certainly knows his way around that turf, carefully exploring and exploiting all the traditions of that genre through well-crafted, vigorous prose. The PI is tough and intrepid and witty, the dames slinky and dangerous, and the bad guys are menacing--if you enjoy that sort of thing, then The Chicago Way is definitely right up your (back) alley.
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38 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Snappy Dialogue Doesn't Make a Great Novel, September 25, 2007
This review is from: The Chicago Way (Hardcover)
THE CHICAGO WAY has been so heavily hyped that I was expecting a crime novel as good as Raymond Chandler's work or even early Robert Parker. But in my opinion, this doesn't even come close.
Michael Harvey's a stylish writer, and writes in a clean style that I normally admire in a crime author. However, this book focuses on snappy dialogue at the expense of everything else. The plot is formulaic, and meanders around quite a bit before rushing toward a rather implausible conclusion. Many of the characters lack depth, and I didn't end up caring for anybody in this novel very much.
In short, THE CHICAGO WAY consists of a lot of sizzle, but not very much steak. The prose is punchy and fun, but that's not a substitute for strong storytelling. This novel never engaged me in the end, so I can't recommend it. Still, I think Harvey has enough talent that I would be willing to give his next book a try.
If you're looking for a good PI mystery, I would suggest two other recent titles: LITTLE GIRL LOST by Richard Aleas and BIG CITY, BAD BLOOD by Sean Chercover. Both these novels are very well written, but have much stronger plots and characters.
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