Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Under Morrell's Standards....., March 17, 2005
LONG LOST is definitely a page turner. I read it in two days. However, as with Morrell's THE PROTECTOR, I was expecting more. I've read most of what he has written, and his most recent books cannot be compared to his earlier ones.
LONG LOST is different from most of all his other novels, in the sense that the main character is not a bodyguard, spy or other type of super human caracter. Brad Denning is a typical wealthy american, who is dedicated to his work and his family. He is, however seriously affected by the fact that his kid brother was kidnapped 25 years before. He feels responsible and has carried guilt with him practically all his life.
The plot is well laid out, and Brad Denning is a credible character.
The book is very easy to read and chapter after chapter you will simply want to go on, and find out what happens next. The ending, which again never happened with most of his prior works, is rather predictable.
If this book is compared to others of the same genre, it will definitely come out on top, but Morrell has set very high standards with his prior novels, and fans will be left with a bit of a sense of emptiness.
Overall, the book is pretty good, and it's worth the time it takes to go through the 300+ pages.
I am starting to think that the muses of inspiration have abandoned Morrell, but since he still has to make a living, he continues to write.
Being not only an avid reader, but also a music addict, I must say if I compare books to music, I had a similar feeling with U2, right after they released RATTLE AND HUM. In my opinion, they put out quite a few weak albums, which people continued to buy simple because it was U2.
Morrell has written so many good books, that I am willing to give him alast chance. If his next book does not rise to my expectations, that's it for me and him.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A family is torn apart by terrors from the past., May 24, 2002
David Morrell's new novel, "Long Lost," is about Brad and Karen Denning, a happily married couple who live with their eleven-year-old son, Jason, in Denver, Colorado. Brad is a prosperous and well-known architect. He has received favorable magazine and television coverage praising the innovative structures that he has built. Brad has one major regret in life. When he was a thirteen-year-old youngster in Ohio, he once told his nine-year-old brother, Petey to go home by himself, since Brad's friends didn't want a little kid tagging along with them. Tragically, Petey got on his bike, pedaled away, and disappeared off the face of the earth. Petey's disappearance devastated the Denning family and Brad has never gotten over his grief and his guilt over the loss of his brother. One day, a man shows up out of the blue and calls out Brad's name while Brad is walking along the street in downtown Denver. The man states that he had seen a television spot featuring Brad, and he insists that he is Petey, Brad's long-lost brother. "Petey" claims to be elated to have the opportunity to reconnect at last with his family and he seems anxious to make up for all the lost years when the brothers were separated. After an initial period of understandable skepticism, Brad buys the man's story, particularly because "Petey" knows facts about the boys' childhood that no one else could have told him. Brad soon finds that he has inadvertently plunged himself and his family into a morass of terror and despair by allowing this man into his home. Is this man really Brad's long-lost brother, or is he an impostor? What soon becomes clear is that "Petey's" agenda is not about reconciliation. Brad is soon put into a position of having to single-handedly save his family and himself from disaster. Morrell's writing in "Long Lost" is simple and understated. The chapters are brief and he uses the first person, which makes the action more personal and immediate. The novel is fast-paced and exciting and the reader is kept on the edge of his seat wondering how the plot will resolve itself. The only downside is that occasional melodramatic touches seep into the narrative, and there are a few cliches which detract from the flow of the story. However, for the most part "Long Lost" is a good summer read. Put your feet up and prepare to lose yourself in a story about a desperate person who will do anything to reclaim his life from a very dangerous man.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Page turner of the first water, May 30, 2003
Brad Denning's life is going well--a prosperous Denver based architect ,his work is attracting positive interest nationally ,and his marriage to the beautiful and intelligent Kate is solid and has produced one son ,Jason.There is a shadow over his life however -the disappearance of his younger brother many years previously ,when he was 13 and Petey ,the brother,8 .He blames himself for the vanishing as Petey had been told he was not welcome at a ball game for older kids and was trekking forlornly home ,never to make it.Following an appearance on national TV ,Brad is contacted by a stranger claiming to be his long lost brother and relating a history of abduction ,abuse and casual labouring in construction.He is able to produce snipppets of information that persuade Brad and his family of his bona fides and is welcomed into the family.He rewards them by attemting to murder Brad and then kidnapping Kate and Jason. FBI investigations come to naught and so Brad sets out to trace the man .Along the way he finds answers to the key questions --Is the man really his brother? Are his family alive and if so can they be rescued. You will have a good time finding out and some of the scenes are especially vivid as when Brad is trapped in a pit full of rattlesnakes (this is similar to the cave scene in First Blood in its vivid intensity) and the book builds to an explosive and powerful climax. Simpler and leaner than some of his more labyrinthine outings this shows the author in a rich vein of literary form and is a satisfying thriller likely to be enjoyed by a wide readership.
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