Book Store   Audio Books   Child Books   Comic Books   Computer Books  
Gone, Baby, Gone (Harper Fiction) Books In Print, Audio Books.
Home » All Books » Mystery/Thrillers » Authors » D » Dennis Lehane

Authors • Dean Koontz
Authors • D B Borton
Authors • Denise Osborne
Authors • Deborah Crombie
Authors • David J Walker
Authors • David Wiltse
Authors • Dorothy L Sayers
Authors • Denise Dietz
Authors • Dick Francis
Authors • David Osborn
Authors • Dorothy Dunnett
Authors • Dorothy Simpson

Gone, Baby, Gone (Harper Fiction)
buy bestselling books in print, audio books
Gone, Baby, Gone (Harper Fiction) List Price: $7.99
Our Price: $7.99
You Save: $0

[ + Zoom ]   [ Buy Now ] Book : Usually ships in 24 hours
Gone, Baby, Gone (Harper Fiction) description
Cheese Olamon, "a six-foot-two, four-hundred-and-thirty-pound yellow-haired Scandinavian who'd somehow arrived at the misconception he was black," is telling his old grammar school friends Patrick Kenzie and Angie Gennaro why they have to convince another mutual chum, the gun dealer Bubba Rugowski, that Cheese didn't try to have him killed. "You let Bubba know I'm clean when it comes to what happened to him. You want me alive. Okay? Without me, that girl will be gone. Gone-gone. You understand? Gone, baby, gone." Of all the chilling, completely credible scenes of sadness, destruction, and betrayal in Dennis Lehane's fourth and very possibly best book about Kenzie and Gennaro, this moment stands out because it captures in a few pages the essence of Lehane's success.

Private detectives Kenzie and Gennaro, who live in the same working-class Dorchester neighborhood of Boston where they grew up, have gone to visit drug dealer Cheese in prison because they think he's involved in the kidnapping of 4-year-old Amanda McCready. Without sentimentalizing the grotesque figure of Cheese, Lehane tells us enough about his past to make us understand why he and the two detectives might share enough trust to possibly save a child's life when all the best efforts of traditional law enforcement have failed. By putting Kenzie and Gennaro just to one side of the law (but not totally outside; they have several cop friends, a very important part of the story), Lehane adds depth and edge to traditional genre relationships. The lifelong love affair between Kenzie and Gennaro--interrupted by her marriage to his best friend--is another perfectly controlled element that grows and changes as we watch. Surrounded by dead, abused, and missing children, Kenzie mourns and rages while Gennaro longs for one of her own. So the choices made by both of them in the final pages of this absolutely gripping story have the inevitability of life and the dazzling beauty of art.

Other Kenzie/Gennaro books available in paperback: Darkness, Take My Hand, A Drink Before the War, Sacred. --Dick Adler

Gone, Baby, Gone (Harper Fiction) Customer Reviews
  1     2     3  
♥♥♥♥♥ Series Losing Steam
When I read "A Drink before the War" I thought were has this series been all my life and went out and bought them all. This one was my forth and either the series doesn't hold up or I'm just jaded. The heros have become very predictable and their gun running but lovable sidekick really doesn't do much in this one. It is an OK read, better than many, but the fizz is gone. Think I have one more stuck away and I'll read it but that's it for the series and the author.
  1     2     3