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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rip-roaringly good, and I usually hate detective novels ..., April 15, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Dying Embers: An Art Hardin Mystery (Hardcover)
This book kept me reading right down to the last page. Art Hardin is a believable private eye -- he's middle-aged and married with three kids. No Tom Selleck or Pierce Brosnan type stuff here, unless you count perhaps his wit. His wry "comments" on the situations he gets into kept me laughing even as the mystery got more and more puzzling. He starts out a routine case that should be boring -- finding a widowed businessman's old college girlfriend. However, the young lady turns up dead shortly after Art locates her, and Art finds himself being followed. After his office is broken into and child porn is planted there for the police to find, our hero stands to lose his career and possibly even his wife.

I found this book easier to follow than Bailey's first novel, plus Art's relationship with his wife gave the story a human touch for me. I highly recommend it. If you enjoy it as much as I did, do a search on Yahoo for the Art Hardin fan club, and we'll discuss the books!

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Never corner something that's meaner than you are."- Old Midwestern Aphorism, June 11, 2006
By 
Jim Rose (Battle Creek, Michigan) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dying Embers: An Art Hardin Mystery (Hardcover)

Grand Rapids' fast-talking and faster thinking PI, Art Hardin is on the job again and this time, things look good. It's a fairly easy case tracking down Anne Jones, one time college pal of mega wealthy industrialist, Scott Lambert. Art's quick success leads to another even more lucrative assignment from Mr. Lambert, and life looks very good indeed. Looks can be deceiving.

With breathtaking speed, things turn dark and ugly. Anne turns up brutally murdered and it's almost dead certain that Lambert is the perpetrator...with our hero a probable accessory. Events and the evidence may cost Hardin a lot, including his career, his good name, his wife and family and his life.

"Dying Embers" is author Robert Bailey's second Art Hardin Mystery and it's a guaranteed nail-biting page-turner. Bailey again demonstrates his uncanny ability to pull readers instantly into Hardin's world and to make them really care about its denizens. When one cannot decide if a pulse-pounding, can't-put-it-down novel is more character, plot or pure action driven, one must conclude that he/she has found an exceptional read from a master writer.

Let's hear it for a third in the series soon!
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Couldn't Put It Down!, May 12, 2006
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This review is from: Dying Embers: An Art Hardin Mystery (Hardcover)
When I finished Robert Bailey's first book Private Heat I couldn't wait to read this one. I wasn't disappointed. What a page turner. I would put it down and find myself worried about how Art Hardin could possibly get out of the "jam" of the day. Even though I had other things I needed to be doing I'd have to pick it up again to see how he could possibly find a way out of it. He'd get out of one jam and be into another. Everyone either wanted a piece of him or hated him. Even his wife! I knew I had to get to the end of the book or get nothing else done. Good Read! So exciting I found myself scanning ahead because I was worried about him. I know, it's just a story. But I got caught up in it. Try it. You won't be disappointed!
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hardin is Back in "Dying Embers", November 15, 2004
By 
This review is from: Dying Embers: An Art Hardin Mystery (Hardcover)
"People can be trusted to lie. They lie in the bedroom, the boardroom, and the courtroom. The biggest lies are told the loudest. The worst ones are the ones they whisper to themselves." (Page 9)

In this intense sequel to his book "Private Heat" author Robert E. Bailey brings back Art Hardin and pushes him to the literal edge of losing it all. It begins when he is hired by Scott Lambert, a wealthy businessman about to take his company public on the back of some cutting edge technology, to find a certain person named Anne Jones. He knew her in college and was attracted to her and because of one thing or the other, he lost track of her. Hardin agrees with the provisions that Mr. Lambert does not get her address and that once found she has to make the first contact.

Mr. Lambert agrees and then before he leaves their meeting, tells Art that the operative working undercover for Art's wife, Wendy, who runs an industrial security business, hasn't made contact in a week. Art agrees to pass on the message to his wife and begins the search for Anne Jones. Before long he finds the reclusive artist locked behind the gates in a nearby wealthy mansion almost as if she is the prisoner of a wealthy patron.

Having found her, he thinks the case is solved but it is actually just the beginning of a rapidly escalating nightmare. Through as series of increasingly violent events, he is attacked professionally and personally again and again to the point that his marriage is threatened. He has become a target and should he accept the FBI's plan which might be the only way out, he just might die anyway. However, death might be preferable.

This is one of those rare cases where the second book from an author is even better than the first. With the complexity of plot, it reminds me very favorably of an early Robert Ludlum where reality is nothing more than smoke and mirrors and the main character is a pawn in everyone else's game. Just when the situation is under control, or at least appears to be, the situation changes and violently morphs into something else.

Having laid the groundwork in the first novel, this book also serves to bring more attention to the secondary characters in Art's life. Most notably his wife Wendy and his teenage sons, Danny and Ben. Not only does this case threaten the family's professional livelihood, it threatens their marriage. Having a husband arrested for some of the things Art is accused of, would make any wife question what she knows to be true about her husband and her marriage. The dynamic that flows between Wendy and her husband severs as a major secondary storyline in this novel and something I am sure will be pursued in the future.

The same small criticism of the first book holds here as well regarding names and keeping track of the players. It should be noted that this book is significantly more complicated than the first, which was fairly complicated, which makes the naming issue more critical. Still, the criticism is minor and should not deter potential readers, especially with a third book planned to be out in the spring.

The news of another book in the series is very good news as Art and his secondary characters are fast becoming old friends. That is a somewhat risky proposition, as they seem to be leading very violent lives lately with little sleep. But, in the long run, it's worth it.


Book Facts:


Dying Embers (An Art Hardin Mystery)
By Robert Bailey
M. Evans and Company, Inc.
2003
ISBN # 0-87131-997-7
Hardback
$21.95 US




Kevin R. Tipple © 2004

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Bring an oxygen tank, you're gonna need it!, April 22, 2006
This review is from: Dying Embers: An Art Hardin Mystery (Hardcover)
I was a full 24 hours catching my breath after finishing this book. Sophomore novels are too often unimpressive, but Bailey doesn't suffer from that curse. Funny, wildly exciting, complex, and sometimes painfully personal, PI Art Hardin is a guy we all want living next door to us. Or do we? Simple cases seem to get real convoluted real fast when Art lends his investigative prowess. The author gives us a more personal look at Hardin's marriage this time out, but don't worry. This book is in no danger of degenerating into a soap opera, and if you want to keep up with Hardin you better pack a lunch and make sure it's all brain food -- because the author dumbs down his plots for NOBODY, thank heavens! After years of believing I was never going to find another writer like AA Fair who can deliver a complex plot without Pictionary explanations, I'm in heaven. Robert Bailey's name and books belong on the bestseller lists. If we could replace Grisham's name with Bailey, maybe that list would finally have some credibility.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic Clift Hanger, June 22, 2009
This clift hanger was really fantastic. I must read the rest of the series of books if not only just to see how badly Art gets pounded upon or how the law keep him in jail (or want to). This was another book that was hard to put aside. I will recommend Robert's books to my friends and surely get the others to read. One last thing, I would like to see Art work with his wife more in another fantastic clift hanger.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Give this book a shot, July 13, 2007
By 
Chris Forman (Hudson Valley, NY) - See all my reviews
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In his second outing Art Hardin, that next door neighbor type who just happens to be a private detective, comes into his own as the hard-boiled guy who takes a beating and buys his wife a card. Bailey has created a character that is beleivable and likeable. If you like the old tough guy private detective give this book a shot. If you like a more sensitive guy, give this book a shot. If you want to sit on the edge of your seat, give this book a shot.

This is even better than his first book, Private Heat. I'll be sure to read the next one soon.
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Dying Embers: An Art Hardin Mystery
Dying Embers: An Art Hardin Mystery by Robert E. Bailey (Hardcover - February 25, 2003)
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