If you read at all and haven’t seen Dennis Lehane’s name, you must be reading under the porch or something. So, you know his name, but know nothing about his work. Remember the movie,
Mystic River? Dennis Lehane wrote the book. Remember
Gone, Baby Gone? Yep, Lehane again.
I’ve got three more for you:
Shutter Island (soon to be a movie – read the book first, though),
Darkness, Take My Hand and
The Given Day.
Shutter Island
U.S. Marshalls Teddy Daniels and his partner Chuck Aule are sent to Shutter Island to find an escaped female patient. Shutter Island is home to a hospital for the criminally insane. I simply can’t tell you anything more about the plot because I won’t be able to help myself – I’ll give away the ending without meaning to.
I will give you these guidelines:
1) Do not read
Shutter Island at night.
2) Do not read
Shutter Island with a book light (if you ignored #1).
3) Do not read
Shutter Island if there is any sort of storm raging outside.
4) Do not read
Shutter Island unless you can see every corner of the room you are in and are facing the door.
5) Do not listen to an audio version of
Shutter Island if you aren’t following guidelines 1-5.
6) Hold on tight!
7) Enjoy every single word, every single twist, every single breath you take because there won’t be many…
Darkness, Take My Hand
Dennis Lehane uses his recurring characters, Patrick Kenzie and Angie Gennaro, private investigators who have known each other since childhood. We enter their violent world and are immediately with them as they solve another mystery. Lehane sugarcoats nothing, so be prepared.
Along the way we meet Bubba, a good friend to have, and Kenzie and Gennaro’s Boston Police Department connections. It’s good to have friends on both sides of the law for Kenzie and Gennaro.
In
Darkness, Take My Hand, people are dying, but first, a loved one receives a photo of the intended victim. The photos are disturbing and no one puts it together that the person in the photo is going to die.
The relationship between Kenzie, Gennaro and the case becomes apparent and I confess I gasped. I hope you do too. Fasten your seatbelt as you ride with Kenzie and Gennaro through Boston. You will remember or learn for the first time why Dennis Lehane’s books are exceptional.
The Given Day
This latest book by Dennis Lehane, while fiction, sprinkles in all sorts of historical facts and situations you won’t need the History Channel. I don’t normally care for an author who appears to need to dazzle you with all manner of historical facts and notable historical figures. Lehane does such a superlative job of blending historical events and figures with his fictional story I can easily forgive him. And he’s even added baseball. Who could ask for anything more?
In
The Given Day we meet the Coughlin family. They basically “run” Boston PD circa 1920. When the Boston PD goes on strike and the city falls apart, everything the Coughlin family thought they held true falls apart.
The Given Day has all the elements needed to make for a gripping novel: corruption, murders, influenza (a little too realistic given the current health issues in today’s headlines) and racism.
While a large part of the novel is set in Boston, Lehane weaves in relevant states where other action takes place, but all roads lead to and from Boston.
There is a large cast, but keeping a scorecard won’t be necessary. I guarantee it will be simple to keep a list in your head of good guys and bad guys.
The Given Day is a huge tome, so try to block out a significant amount of time to really have a chance to sink your teeth into it. I don’t recommend reading it in bed, though. You’ll be up all night.