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Misery Bay: An Alex McKnight Novel (Alex Mcknight Mystery)
 
 

Misery Bay: An Alex McKnight Novel (Alex Mcknight Mystery) [Kindle Edition]

Steve Hamilton
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (62 customer reviews)

Print List Price: $24.99
Kindle Price: $11.99 includes free wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
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Sold by: Macmillan
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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

ALEX MCKNIGHT IS BACK in the long-awaited return of one of crime fiction's most critically acclaimed series.

On a frozen January night, a young man loops one end of a long rope over the branch of a tree. The other end he ties around his neck. A snowmobiler will find him thirty-six hours later, his lifeless eyes staring out at the endless cold water of Lake Superior. It happens in a lonely corner of the Upper Peninsula, in a place they call Misery Bay. 
            Alex McKnight does not know this young man, and he won’t even hear about the suicide until another cold night, two months later and 250 miles away, when the door to the Glasgow Inn opens and the last person Alex would ever expect to see comes walking in to ask for his help.  
            What seems like a simple quest to find a few answers will turn into a nightmare of sudden violence and bloody revenge, and a race against time to catch a ruthless killer. McKnight knows all about evil, of course, having faced down a madman who killed his partner and left a bullet next to his heart. Mobsters, drug dealers, hit men—he’s seen them all, and they’ve taken away almost everything he’s ever loved. But none of them could have ever prepared him for the darkness he’s about to face.


Author One-on-One: Steve Hamilton and Michael Koryta

In this Amazon exclusive, Steve Hamilton is interviewed by fellow thriller author Michael Koryta. The tables get turned when Hamilton interviews Koryta on the The Ridge page.

Steve Hamilton

Koryta: Misery Bay opens with relentless good cheer--a frigid night, a corpse dangling from a tree. And, back for the first time in a few years, Alex McKnight. Tell us a little about how it felt to be back with him from the writer's perspective.

Hamilton: It was great to be back, for the simple reason that it had been so long. Almost five years between books! I hadn’t planned on being away from the series for so long, but I sorta ended up getting lost at sea there for a while. A standalone that just about kills you will do that.

Koryta: You opened your career with seven straight Alex McKnight novels, and then followed with two standalones, including last year's The Lock Artist, which just won the Edgar for best novel. Did you always know you were going to return to Alex, or was there a time when you thought you were done?

Hamilton: I knew that, after A Stolen Season, the last McKnight book, I really needed to take a break. And that Alex needed a break, too--as strange as that may sound to say about a fictional character. I just couldn’t bring myself to drag him out of his cabin, into some new sort of trouble again. Does that make any sense?

Koryta: Absolutely! I know you don't write from an outline. What's something from Misery Bay that stands out as a favorite unanticipated development?

Hamilton: I guess that would have to be the relationship that develops between Alex and his old nemesis, Chief Roy Maven. I knew they’d have to unlikely allies in this book, but actually having them together for so long, I was surprised to see how well that worked. I wouldn’t call them good friends or anything at this point, but they definitely had to come to a new understanding about each other.

Koryta: We both got our publishing start through the St. Martin's Press/Private Eye Writers of America contest. So tell me: who's your all-time favorite fictional detective, and who is a newer discovery that you're excited about?

Hamilton: All-time favorite fictional detective? Still has to be Lawrence Block’s Matt Scudder, I think. As far as a newer discovery... If you’re talking about a new private eye, I honestly don’t know of one right now. The genre has been down a little bit lately, and I haven’t read anything new and great for while. (Maybe this year’s contest winner? There’s always hope!)

Koryta: As I look over my shoulder at the Steve Hamilton section in my bookshelf, I can't help but notice some repeated themes in the titles: winter, north, ice, cold, wind. And, oh yeah, misery. Be honest: are you really that inspired by cold weather, or is this evidence that you desperately want to move to the tropics?

Michael Koryta

Hamilton: To me, when I think about “hardboiled” or “noir,” I think about cold. When just going outside to your car is an act of courage, that has to say something about you already, right? I know that Raymond Chandler’s idea of hardboiled was a sun-baked street in Los Angeles, but for me there’s just something about a frozen lake and a cold wind that will turn you inside-out.

Koryta: I’m in sun-drenched Los Angeles right now and it’s tough to argue that point. This is your 10th novel. It has been 13 years since your Edgar-winning debut, A Cold Day in Paradise. What has changed in your perspective and approach to writing in that time and throughout those books?

Hamilton: Well, it doesn’t get any easier. Or at least it shouldn’t, or else you’re doing it wrong. And I’m STILL waiting for a great idea for a book to come floating by and land on my shoulder like a some kind of beautiful butterfly. These authors who have all these great ideas that just come to them out of nowhere, I want to slap them. If I have one sorta half-baked idea that might get me through one chapter, I’m lucky.

Koryta: What's next--another Alex or another standalone? Give us a taste.

Hamilton: The publisher really likes this return to Alex thing, so they want some more of that. More importantly, I’m finding it’s pretty great to be back in Paradise. So for the next two books, at least, it’s Alex McKnight all the way! I know I’ll take breaks again and try new things, but it’s nice to know I can always to come back to see what he’s up to next.

Review

Praise for Misery Bay:

"Superb.... Assured prose, a thrilling plot, and a surprising, satisfying conclusion make this a winner."--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
 
"This new entry in Hamilton's Alex McKnight series is one of his best. ... You'll not put this down willingly, and when you do, you'll still be thinking about it."--Romantic Times

Praise for Steve Hamilton:

“Hamilton’s compelling, vigorous prose doesn’t allow the option of taking a break.” —Los Angeles Times

“Steve Hamilton writes the kind of stories that manly men and tough-minded women can’t resist.” —The New York Times

"Hamilton writes tough, passionate novels.... This is crime writing at its very best.” —George Pelecanos

“Hamilton gives us mysteries within mysteries as well as a hero who simply won’t be beaten down.” —The Miami Herald

“Already one of our best writers.” —Laura Lippman

“Hamilton’s prose moves us smoothly along and his characters are marvelously real.” —Publishers Weekly

“Hamilton’s prose...remains an unself-consciously terse pleasure.” —Entertainment Weekly

“Hamilton... paints a rich and vivid portrait of a world where the chill in the air is often matched by that of the soul.” —The Providence Journal

“Hamilton never misses a beat.” —Rocky Mountain News

"I really like his main character, Alex McKnight, and I'm ready to re-visit Paradise, Michigan."--James Patterson on North of Nowhere

Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 482 KB
  • Publisher: Minotaur Books (June 7, 2011)
  • Sold by: Macmillan
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B004SHE372
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (62 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #13,767 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

62 Reviews
5 star:
 (43)
4 star:
 (15)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (62 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

40 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hamilton and McKnight are wonderful together, May 15, 2011
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
The feeling of ease and comfort with his main character are immediate in this newest Steve Hamilton story featuring his Numero Uno detective, Alex McKnight. The last McKnight story was six years ago. This has been one of my favorite series over the years and I was truly waiting for this latest installment. This one did not disappoint.

The story starts with an eerie preface that alludes to the upcoming events and then immediately a well done background of the characters and past events is done by Hamilton - and it was done just right - so as not to leave out readers that had not been fortunate enough to have found this series years ago. In the previous five stories, Hamilton takes one of the main characters and places them in danger with Alex on the trail. In this one, Chief Maven and McKnight, Maven's arch enemy in the Paradise area, are placed together as they attempt to unravel the madman with which they are entangled.

The writing is crisp, the dialogue is genuine and humor dry and without forced effort. The story is complex and moves at a good pace. The rhythm is just right between the characters and the storyline. There is very little not to like in this novel. If I had to pick something it would be the fact that Alex could remain ahead of the FBI on the trial of the bad guys. However, that said, the story never felt forced or fake.

There is plenty to like in this installment, and it can play very well without going back into the series. There are several lines in the story about past incidents and they will make you want to start at the beginning of this series. I would rate this as the best of the six books by Hamilton that I have read. Definitely one for the pile of reading material, especially if this is your genre.
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15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best McKnight yet, April 30, 2011
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Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Misery Bay is the ninth installment in Steve Hamilton's Alex McKnight series. Like the others, this one takes place in Michigan's upper penninsula. Hamilton capture's perfectly the bitter cold, ice and winds off Lake Superior, the bleakness of the landscape, and the isolation of its inhabitants. In this book, McKnight joins forces, albeit reluctantly, with his nemesis, Chief Roy Maven, whose friend's son has committed suicide. The friend is distraught with the enormity of his loss. McKnight agrees to investigate what could have driven the boy to suicide, if only to bring the man some peace of mind. Then, the man, himself, is murdered--in Chief Maven's home. Other suicides come to light, always children of law officers, and in each case, the officer is subsequently murdered. No one except Maven and McKnight see the pattern. The FBI sees coincidence. And, scattered thoroughout the book, between chapters, are snippets of conversation from filming sessions. Slowly the reader begins to suspect what might be going on. Equally as slowly, McKnight and Maven unravel the mystery. The final few chapters bring it together with McKnight alone and in great danger. Gripping conclusion. A must read for Hamilton fans!
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars These Are Getting A Little Formulaic For Me..., July 9, 2011
I've read everything he's written. And this wasn't bad in any way. It was entertaining, but they're all pretty much the same plot, just with different killers. Someone comes into the bar to try and get him to help. He doesn't want to, but reluctantly agrees. He winds up driving all over Michigan, and sometimes into Canada. Sometimes he falls in love, sometimes he doesn't. The murders are solved and he goes back to the bar. There's some snow plowing and cabin building thrown in for the DIY set. So if you've read all of the previous books, unless you're really bored, there's nothing new here. If you're just looking for a book to kill a few evernings...have at it.
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More About the Author

Steve Hamilton was born in Detroit and attended the University of Michigan, where he was awarded the prestigious Avery Hopwood Prize for writing. His first novel, A Cold Day in Paradise, won the St. Martin's Press/PWA Best First Private Eye Novel Contest before going on to win both the Edgar and Shamus Awards for Best First Novel. In 2006, Steve won the Michigan Author Award for his outstanding body of work. He lives in Cottekill, New York, with his wife, Julia, and their two children. Visit his Web site at www.authorstevehamilton.com.

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They have long, long winters up here. Did I mention that yet? By the time the end of March drags around, everyones just a few degrees past crazy. &quote;
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true friend. Meaning the one person who truly understood me, who never wanted anything from me, and who never tried to change me. &quote;
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at least once a week. Res ipsa loquitur. The thing speaks for itself. &quote;
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