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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars THE SILENT HOUR is not to be missed
Known and revered for his Lincoln Perry novels almost immediately from the publication of TONIGHT I SAID GOODBYE, Michael Koryta took a momentary break from the series and its Cleveland area environs with 2008's ENVY THE NIGHT. If you skipped that book because of the change of locale to Wisconsin and the absence of Perry, I would urge you to go back and read it. There are...
Published on September 14, 2009 by Bookreporter

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars "Music expresses that which cannot be said and on which it is impossible to be silent." Victor Hugo
Ex-con Parker Harrison pesters PI Lincoln Perry until Perry agrees to look into a case for him.

Harrison had gotten into a home for paroled murderers run by wealthy, Alexandra Cantrell and her husband, Joshua. Harrison feels that Alexandra's intersession saved his life. Now, after being missing for twelve years, Joshua's body is found, buried in the woods...
Published 19 months ago by michael a. draper


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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars "Music expresses that which cannot be said and on which it is impossible to be silent." Victor Hugo, June 26, 2010
Ex-con Parker Harrison pesters PI Lincoln Perry until Perry agrees to look into a case for him.

Harrison had gotten into a home for paroled murderers run by wealthy, Alexandra Cantrell and her husband, Joshua. Harrison feels that Alexandra's intersession saved his life. Now, after being missing for twelve years, Joshua's body is found, buried in the woods. Harrison wants Linc to find Alexandra.

Alexandra is the sister of Dominic Sanabria, a powerful Mafia figure. Soon after Linc begins his investigation, Sanabria pays him a visit and attempts to find out who hired him.

Another PI, Ken Merriman, approaches Linc. Merriman had been hired by Joshua's parents when he went missing twelve years ago. Now, he wants to work with Linc in his search for Alexandra. Merriman sees the advantage he'd have sinc Linc, a former cop, has connections with the local police and he has experience in dealing with homicides.

Linc is also contacted by Quinn Graham, a police detective who is working on the case of Joshua's remains being found in Pennsylvania. Quinn is a stern law enforcement official who demands that Linc go through him in any investigation.

As the story progresses, the reader sees the frustration investigators have in working a cold case. Linc wasn't too anxious to take the case in the beginning and with lack of success and another tragedy, Linc puts the case on back burner. However, something changes his mind.

The novel is a good study of a man in turmoil and provides an interesting view of how paroled people attempt to adjust to society. The plot is complex, with numerous plot twists to keep the reader guessing about the outcome.

There is less suspense than in the author's "Tonight I Said Goodbye," but perhaps this is a more factual manner in which private investigators deal with some of the cases and misfortunes that can occur.

The author's theme seemed to be that the belief some people place in others can be rewarded.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars THE SILENT HOUR is not to be missed, September 14, 2009
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Bookreporter (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
Known and revered for his Lincoln Perry novels almost immediately from the publication of TONIGHT I SAID GOODBYE, Michael Koryta took a momentary break from the series and its Cleveland area environs with 2008's ENVY THE NIGHT. If you skipped that book because of the change of locale to Wisconsin and the absence of Perry, I would urge you to go back and read it. There are passages that will resonate far after you've turned the last page. That having been said, Perry's return in THE SILENT HOUR is most welcome.

I spent my formative years in the Cleveland area in the 1960s and 1970s; it was a great time and place if you loved rock music and the trappings that went along with it. Its fortunes have risen and fallen a number of times since then, but no matter what happens, it seems informed by an ennui that never leaves --- infusing not only the city proper once one gets beyond the outskirts of downtown, but also some of the tonier suburbs such as Chagrin Falls and Rocky River. Koryta captures this feeling perfectly through Lincoln Perry, an ex-cop turned private investigator who isn't exactly sure that this is what he wants to be. Perry's state of mind results from the fact that his job brings the people around him into jeopardy, whether it be Joe, his partner in their investigation firm, Perry's girlfriend Amy, or occasionally his clients. It has also brought Perry a degree of notoriety, by turns welcome and unwelcome --- and it is the latter in THE SILENT HOUR that brings Parker Harrison to Perry's door.

Harrison is a convicted murderer who, upon release, was a resident of Whisper Ridge, a hauntingly beautiful but unusual home that housed a unique program for paroled murderers like Harrison. It was the brainchild of Alexandra Sanabria Cantrell, the daughter of a deceased Mafia don. Reluctantly aided by her husband Joshua, Alexandra had operated the erstwhile halfway house on the theory that its rural setting would aid violent offenders in their efforts to keep their darker sides in check. After a little more than three years, however, the Cantrells disappeared, apparently abandoning the program and the house, which has sat deserted and neglected for over a decade. Harrison wants to retain Perry for the purpose of locating the long-missing Alexandra; Perry is reluctant, even resistant, to do so, in part because of his basic distrust of Harrison at first sight.

Nevertheless, Perry begins an investigation and almost immediately discovers two things. The first is that someone has been paying the property taxes on the Cantrell house, which has never been sold. The second is that the decomposed body of Joshua was discovered in rural Pennsylvania at almost the exact time that Harrison began his attempts to locate Alexandra. Furious with Harrison and himself, Perry fires his client. Yet he is drawn back into the matter by a number of individuals, including a sincere but only semi-competent investigator who attempted to find Joshua when he first disappeared; a hardened Pennsylvania police investigator whose jurisdiction was the site of the discovery of Joshua's body; and a former FBI agent who is obsessed with the Sanabria crime family, particularly Dominic, Alexandra's brother. Perry wishes to be left alone, not wanting to visit the trouble that is surely coming upon Amy and the semi-retired Joe. But the case tugs at him, and pieces of the puzzle begin to fall into place even as tragic events, past and present, are revealed as well.

Many surprises are uncovered here, and this continues until practically the last page, where the law of unintended consequences is laid bare for all to see. Koryta emerged fully formed as a major talent in the mystery genre with his debut novel, and with each new work he continues to exceed the promises made by its predecessors. THE SILENT HOUR is not to be missed.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Study in Character, August 12, 2009
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Lincoln Perry has ignored Harrison Parker's letters for several months, but when the ex-con shows up at his office door step, he doesn't have much choice but to talk to the man. So, he'll listen and politely decline. Parker wants Perry to locate his former employer, Alexandra, who disappeared with her husband twelve years ago; he's convinced Lincoln is the right man to tell the story.

The case seems simple enough and despite his determination not to take it, Perry agrees. Then little by little, he discovers all the details that Parker conveniently left out of his explanation. The details that walk Perry right into the middle of a murder investigation with possible ties to the Cleveland mob.

This is the summary of the crime that Lincoln investigates in this novel. But it is really more of a by-product of the main focus of THE SILENT HOUR. Lincoln does have to be a storyteller and find something that is hidden from the world. However, that search is internal. What Lincoln needs to find most in this novel is his way, the answers to his own questions. Lincoln must find the person inside himself who isn't full of the rage and the hate and vengeance. Even more than a crime novel, THE SILENT HOUR is a passionate study in character.

This is a Koryta novel that is going to wreak havoc on the spectrum of the reader's emotions, more so than any of the novels before it. And when Lincoln's story has finally been told, the reader will forever be changed.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Dissapointed, August 21, 2010
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This review is from: The Silent Hour (Lincoln Perry) (Mass Market Paperback)
I thoroughly enjoyed the author's first four books. That made my disappointment with The Silent Hour all the more devastating. Reading it was like trudging through a mud flat at low tide while wearing hip boots. It was almost all dialog. Novels that I have enjoyed (including Koryta's first four) had at least one thing in common: There was a balance between dialog and action. If his next one does not return to that balance he will be off my preferred author's list.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Lincoln with Joe = soda without carbination, March 20, 2010
First Sentence: He'd sharpened his knife just an hour before the killing.

PI Lincoln Perry is on his own after his partner, Joe Pritchard, decided to spend the winter in Florida. Lincoln is receiving letters from a paroled killer wanting to hire him to find the missing daughter of mobsters. The woman and her husband disappeared a decade ago from a unique and valuable rural home where they ran an unlicensed half-way house for violent offenders. When the skeleton of the husband turns up, having a less-than-desirable client, and a case connected to the Mob, Perry questions his abilities and commitment to being a PI.

It is so frustrating to have an author whose previous books I've loved, write one I find disappointing. Perhaps because I liked the previous books so well, I didn't notice them, but I did here: portents.

I intensely dislike the use of portents, particularly where they broadcast the plot and thus, detract from the suspense or surprise of the story. They were unnecessary.

The plot, itself, was interesting, but it bogged down in the middle. Lincoln's introspection nearly overwhelmed the pace and appeal of the story, even though some of it was well done..."It stacked up on you, after a while. The violence."

I understand wanting to focus on a single protagonist in a series where the protagonists have been a team. In this case, having Lincoln with Joe reminded me of soda without carbonation; flat. I like Lincoln as a character. I appreciated learning more about is background, particularly his mother. At the same time, without Joe, an older, ex-cop who brought Lincoln into his PI agency, Lincoln's inexperience showed in a frustrating way. The scenes where Joe is present, is when the book came back to life.

The biggest challenge was that beyond Joe, Lincoln and his girlfriend, Amy, none of the rest of the characters was appealing or interesting. There was nothing in them to make me care whether the case was solved.

If you've not read Koryta, I do recommend the first four books in the series and his standalone "Envy the Night." Shall I continue reading Koryta? Probably, but I'll hope the next book is much better.

THE SILENT HOUR (PI-Lincoln Perry-Cleveland, OH-Cont) - Good
Koryta, Michael - 5th in series
Minotaur Books, ©2009, US Hardcover - ISBN: 9780312361570
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Color Me Disappointed, October 22, 2009
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John R. Linnell (New Gloucester, ME United States) - See all my reviews
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I am in the camp of those who have admired and enjoyed this author's prior efforts and who found this one to be slow going after an intriguing start. I am glad I have seen what he is capable of because had I started with this one, I probably wouldn't be willing to try him again. I know what he is capable of. I remain a fan. Just not of this effort.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Lincoln's Dilemma, September 1, 2009
By 
Ted Feit (Long Beach, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
A convicted murderer who has served his sentence walks into Lincoln Perry's office one day asking him to find the missing daughter (and sister) of Mafia figures. Immediately distrustful of the man, Perry resists the potential client, but finally succumbs to the challenge. The missing woman and her husband had built a secluded home where they began a pilot program to rehabilitate paroled murderers. Thus begins a complicated tale in this latest entry in the series.

On the surface, the woman and her husband appear to have abandoned the multi-million-dollar home, leaving no clues to their whereabouts. And after 12 years, there is little to go on, until the bones of the husband are discovered in Pennsylvania, far from Cleveland where Perry operates. The investigation is daunting both as a case and to Perry's commitment to the PI business. He weighs the dangers in which he places his girlfriend, partner and those close to him against his desire to continue.

The plot is intricately woven and moves forward slowly with intuitive leaps of faith. As a protagonist, Perry is completely human, with knowledge, ability and insecurities. The twists in the story are so unexpected that the reader can only scratch his or her head in awe and wonderment.

Highly recommended.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Koryta is Always Solid, August 24, 2009
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Koryta is always solid; especially his Lincoln Perry mysteries. This was a good mystery, but the worst of his Perry series - which is still darn good.

Perry gets what he believes are crank letters from a murderer now out of prison. He ends up working for him - on and off. The mystery includes a cold case and a very recent one that are intertwined.

The mystery is a very good one. Lincoln Perry, Amy and Pritchard (Perry's former partner) are all good and developed characters. What takes this book down a notch from the prior Lincoln Perry mysteries is the main character's soul searching that occupies much of the middle of the book. To truly appreciate all his emotional upheavel, it helps to have read the previous books. The prior books are hard-boiled mysteries in the Hammett mode. This one starts that way and ends that way, but the middle was a little too much angst, with fairly predictable resolution.

The bottom line is this is a good mystery. The plot twists and turns are very good ones. But, because there is a temporary lapse in the twisting and turning that slows the pace, it is a bit below Mr. Koryta other LP novels. This is not the Lincoln Perry book with which to start a terrific series.
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3.0 out of 5 stars A Little Too Silent?, May 27, 2011
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A paroled murderer talks Lincoln Perry into looking for the woman who helped with his rehabilitation. Turns out, she's been missing 12 years--ever since the murder of her husband.

Perry fans will assuredly want to read this book, but it's not a great place to start for newbies. The story's not as strong as the first three of the series. There's not much action and even fewer surprises to keep the reader up past his/her bedtime.

The first half of the book is compelling enough, but after the midpoint it becomes a bit of a slog. Perry's Hamletic interest in even continuing in the detective game produces waves of ennui.

It seems Koryta has mixed feelings about writing in this genre--or at very least, continuing with the series. He appears to be trying to work it out on paper in THE SILENT HOUR, and he doesn't quite pull it off.

Not a must-read but recommended for Koryta fans.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Silently Good..., July 1, 2010
I haven't been disappointed in a Michael Koryta book yet. After reading some mixed reviews, I actually put off reading it for quite awhile as well as the higher than desired Kindle price. As his newest release date for SO COLD THE RIVER edged closer, I finally decided to listen to the audiobook from the library (sorry, Kindle price still too high).

Lincoln Perry is put to the test in this book as an investigator and it seeps into his personal life more than any other book in the series. A rehabilitated, convicted killer seeks Lincoln's services in finding a woman who has vanished after tragedy enters her life. Secrets, deception, and intrigue bleed from the pages while a mysterious cast of characters work to smear your skills at figuring it all out.

Reader Scott Brick is one of my favorite readers and I think he did another great job putting a voice to the words. I am looking for authors who progressively impress me with each succeeding novel. This one was another solid effort but the bar didn't elevate much, if at all, from the previous novel (ENVY THE NIGHT).
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The Silent Hour (Lincoln Perry)
The Silent Hour (Lincoln Perry) by Michael Koryta (Mass Market Paperback - August 3, 2010)
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