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Tana French

Broken Harbor: A Novel

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The mesmerizing fourth novel of the Dublin murder squad by New York Times bestselling author Tana French

Mick “Scorcher” Kennedy, the brash cop from Tana French’s bestselling Faithful Place, plays by the book and plays hard. That’s what’s made him the Murder squad’s top detective—and that’s what puts the biggest case of the year into his hands.
On one of the half-built, half-abandoned “luxury” developments that litter Ireland, Patrick Spain and his two young children are dead. His wife, Jenny, is in intensive care.
At first, Scorcher and his rookie partner, Richie, think it’s going to be an easy solve. But too many small things can’t be explained. The half dozen baby monitors, their cameras pointing at holes smashed in the Spains’ walls. The files erased from the Spains’ computer. The story Jenny told her sister about a shadowy intruder who was slipping past all the locks.
And Broken Harbor holds memories for Scorcher. Seeing the case on the news sends his sister Dina off the rails again, and she’s resurrecting something that Scorcher thought he had tightly under control: what happened to their family one summer at Broken Harbor, back when they were children.
With her signature blend of police procedural and psychological thriller, French’s new novel goes full throttle with a heinous crime, creating her most complicated detective character and her best book yet.
Amazon.com ReviewAmazon Best Books of the Month, July 2012: In Tana French’s fourth novel, detective Mick “Scorcher” Kennedy and his partner are sent to the abandoned, half-constructed housing development Broken Harbor to investigate the brutal murder of the Spain family. What Scorcher thinks is an open and shut case is quickly complicated when Jenny Spain is found barely alive, and the family’s circumstances are brought to light: hidden baby monitors, a strained mortgage brought on by the housing crisis, and the increasingly erratic signs of a family in crisis. French fans will appreciate this new look at Scorcher, who was a minor character in Faithful Place; he shines as the successful but jaded detective with a troubled past. French delivers a layered psychological thriller and satisfying ‘who dunnit,’ masterfully spinning a plot packed with tension and a haunting mood that rivals the best of the gothic writers. --Heather Dileepan
Review«One of the most talented crime writers alive.”
(The Washington Post )
“Ms. French created haunting, damaged characters who have been hit hard by some cataclysm … This may sound like a routine police procedural. But like Gillian Flynn’s Gone Girl, this summer’s other dagger-sharp display of mind games, Broken Harbor is something more.”
(Janet Maslin, The New York Times )
“So much of the pleasure inherent in reading these novels is in trying to figure out where things are going and being constantly surprised, not to mention thoroughly spooked. I predict Broken Harbor will be on more than one Best of 2012 lists — it’s definitely at the top of mine.”
(The Associated Press )
«Broken Harbor is truly a book for, and of, our broken times. It's literature masquerading as a police procedural.”
(The Cleveland Plain Dealer )
“French has that procedural pro's knack for making mundane police work seem fascinating. And she's drawn not just to the who but also to the why — those bigger mysteries about the human weaknesses that drive somebody to such inhuman brutality. What really gives Broken* Harbor* its nerve-rattling force is her [French’s] exploration of events leading up to the murders, rendered just as vividly as the detectives' scramble to solve them.”
(Entertainment Weekly, A- rating )
“These four novels have instated Ms. French as one of crime fiction’s reigning grand dames — a Celtic tigress … It’s not the fashion in literary fiction these days to address such things as the psychological devastation that a fallout of the middle class can wreak on those who have never known anything else, and Ms. French does it with aplomb — and a headless sparrow and dozens of infrared baby monitors.”
(The Washington Times )
“The fourth book in Tana French’s brilliant, genre-busting series about the (fictitious) Dublin Murder Squad … Invoking atmosphere is one of French’s particular gifts, and in this department, Broken Harbor (the name of the town before the developers got hold of it) is a tour de force.”
(Laura Miller, Salon.com )
“Ms. French has come to be regarded as one of the most distinct and exciting new voices in crime writing. She constructs her plots in a dreamlike, meandering fashion that seems at odds with genre's fixed narrative conventions. Sometimes, it's not even clear whodunit. Her novels have been translated into 31 languages, with 1.5 million copies in print . . .  Broken Harbor has the hallmarks of a standard police procedural: a cocky homicide detective with a troubled past who educates his younger partner with pat lessons; a shocking crime that seems to defy explanation; a heart-stopping twist at the end. But Ms. French undercuts expectations at every turn. The victims begin to look less like victims; the case starts to unravel and the lead detective makes compromises that could ruin him.”
(The Wall Street Journal )
“Both the characters and the crime command attention, page by page.”
(New York Daily News )
“French's flair for setting and its influence on characters, as well as her elegant prose, shine in Broken Harbor. The emptiness of Brianstown becomes the modern equivalent of the spooky mansion, complete with things that go bump in the night … French expertly shows the importance of connecting with each other, and how fragile those bonds can be.”
(South Florida Sun-Sentinel )
«Salon.com’s Laura Miller has this advice for anyone who has not yet read EVERY Tana French novel, 'Just go out and get them right now.'”
(NPR's Weekend Edition )
“Part police procedural, part psychological thriller, all fun.”
(People («Great Summer Reads”) )
“French’s eloquently slow-burning fourth Dublin murder squad novel shows her at the top of her game … As usual, French excels at drawing out complex character dynamics.”
(Publishers Weekly (starred review) )
“Each of French’s novels (Faithful Place, 2010) offers wonderfully complex and fully realized characters … French has never been less than very good, but Broken Harbor is a spellbinder.”
(Booklist (starred review) )
“A mystery that is perfectly in tune with the times . . . [French] continues to distinguish herself with this fourth novel, marked by psychological acuteness and thematic depth … There are complications, deliberations and a riveting resolution.”
(Kirkus Reviews (starred review) )
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Impressions

  • Татьяна Киселеваshared an impression2 years ago
    👍Worth reading
    🚀Unputdownable

    Огонь!

  • Tatiana Teterevlevashared an impression5 years ago

    Тана Френч пишет замечательные детективы. Которые на самом деле, как и любой хороший детектив, больше чем просто криминальная история. «Рассветная бухта» - про то, как рухнул, подточенный экономическим кризисом, такой чистенький, правильный, уютный мирок одной мещанской семьи - мирок, где надежды, мечты, принципы и добродетели выражаются исключительно в списках покупок.

Quotes

  • b2942132260has quoted3 years ago
    Over time, the ghosts of things that happened start to turn distant; once they’ve cut you a couple of million times, their edges blunt on your scar tissue, they wear thin. The ones that slice like razors forever are the ghosts of things that never got the chance to happen.
  • Nathanielhas quoted3 years ago
    There isn’t any why. If Dina was right, then the world was unliveable. If she was wrong, if—and this needed to be true—if the world was sane and it was only the strange galaxy inside her head that was spinning reasonless off any axis, then all of this was because of me.
  • Nathanielhas quoted3 years ago
    They needed to know. Like I told Richie, cause and effect isn’t a luxury. Take it away and we’re left paralyzed, clinging to some tiny raft lurching wild and random on endless black sea. If my mother could go into the water just because, then so could theirs, any night, any minute; so could they. When we can’t see a pattern, we fit pieces together until one takes shape, because we have to.

    I fought them because the pattern they were seeing was the wrong one, and I couldn’t make myself tell them any other way.

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