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Demolition Angel
 
 

Demolition Angel (Mass Market Paperback)

by Robert Crais (Author) "Tell me about the thumb ..." (more)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (117 customer reviews)

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Product Description

From Amazon.com

Penzler Pick, May 2000: Like many authors with ongoing characters, Robert Crais has taken a break from his famous private eye. After eight novels featuring Elvis Cole and his loyal sidekick Joe Pike, Crais has created Carol Starkey, a bomb squad veteran now doing time as a Detective-2 with LAPD's Criminal Conspiracy Section. Three years have passed since the detonation that killed Carol's partner and lover, but she is still severely scarred both mentally and physically. She can't bear to look in the mirror, and she hasn't been with another man since David Boudreaux left her bed that last morning he went to work. She gets through the day with the help of Tagamet and alcohol.

When a bomb call takes the life of another colleague, Carol begins to investigate a series of explosions that seem to be designed to exterminate bomb technicians. She soon realizes that she's "the one that got away." With the help of an FBI agent whom she loathes professionally for interfering with her job but finds attractive anyway, Carol must track down one of the most frighteningly brilliant killers of the modern age.

This edgy thriller's protagonist is one that the reader at first may have difficulty liking, but she's got a background and history that make her truly three-dimensional. One hopes that Crais, one of the handful of young crime writers capable of writing consistently luminous prose, will continue to give us characters like Carol Starkey to star in his always powerful portraits of modern-day Los Angeles. --Otto Penzler --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.



From Publishers Weekly

Acclaimed for his Elvis Cole mystery series (L.A. Requiem, etc.), Crais deserves further garlands for this stand-alone crime novel. The book features one of the most complex heroines to grace a thriller since Clarice Starling locked eyes with Hannibal Lecter, a deliciously spooky villain in the person of a mad bomber known as Mr. Red, and an aggressively involving plot. Carol Starkey was a rising light in the LAPD Bomb Squad until, two years back, a bomb blew up in her face, maiming her and killing her lover/partner. Now Carol's a bitter, chain-smoking alcoholic with the LAPD's Criminal Conspiracy Section, who gets drawn into a literally explosive conspiracy when a bomb kills Charlie Riggio, one of her former bomb squad colleagues. Forensic evidence points toward the bomb being the work of John Michael Fowles, aka Mr. Red, a coldhearted young bomber-assassin-for-hire and master of disguise. Much of the narrative concerns Carol's pursuit of him, most excitingly on the Net through a secret mad-bombers' site, aided by a saturnine federal (ATF) agent, Jack Pell. Intercut are scenes of Mr. Red's various mad plottings, which take a hairpin turn when he learns that the cops think he killed Riggio: for in fact he didn't. That murder pans out as a copycat crime for personal gain, and now Carol must pursue both Riggio's killer and Mr. Red, who in turn has taken an intimate interest in this bomb-savvy female cop. The subsequent pas de deux between Carol and Mr. Red is too reminiscent of the dance between Starling and Lecter, but otherwise this novel gets high marks for originality, and even higher ones for suspense and, above all, for multidimensional, wounded characters who give all the excitement a rare depth. BOMC and Literary Guild featured selection; Mystery Guild main selection; author tour; film rights sold to Columbia/Tri-Star. (May)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

117 Reviews
5 star:
 (44)
4 star:
 (45)
3 star:
 (18)
2 star:
 (6)
1 star:
 (4)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (117 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
4.0 out of 5 stars could have been better, Jul 18 2004
By Victoria (Honolulu, Hawaii) - See all my reviews
Unfortunately, Elvis Cole is not in this novel. Instead we get a new character-former demolition expect and cop, who was so traumatized by the explosion three years ago that she can't exist without booze and pills. Give me a break. He goes on about this woman like she is some tough chick. R. Crais must have led a pretty sheltered life. Story itself is not bad if you don't pay attention to the struggles of the main character and don't count the number of pills she is popping.
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2.0 out of 5 stars This didn't blow me away - too ffar fetched, Jun 22 2004
By binnsie "binnsie" (Bangkok, Thailand) - See all my reviews
I'm sorry but this book just didn't work for me. I do really enjoy fiction as long as it is credible. In the way that engineers sometimes call a report ffinal with two fs when it really is final, I have to describe this book as ffiction to show that it is "over the top" fiction and too far fetched to be enjoyable. There is no way you can relate to the hero of the story or indeed any other player.

The main characters are an expert from the LA bomb squad, our Demolition Angel, Carol Starkey, a weird psychotic bomb maniac, Mr. Red, and an ex-ATF (Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and Explosives) agent, Jack Pell. Thanks to Google for helping me with ATF.

Carol is an alcoholic still carrying physical scars from a bomb explosion 3 years earlier and mental ones from the loss of her lover to the same bomb. Jack too was badly injured by another bomb explosion some years before. Carol slugs back the gin with a vengeance, on the job or off, to satisfy her addiction. She smokes heavily. Every chapter she devours Tagemets by the handful. Thanks again to Google - these are proprietary heartburn and antacid tablets not known in Australia.

Mr. Red is your ultimate weirdo, adopting multiple disguises, skin tones, spoken lingoes and travelling around the country like a ghost leaving only a trail of bombs and not necessarily innocent victims. He is skilled, insecure, evil and extremely dangerous.

Carol and Jack's paths cross early in the story and whilst Mr. Red is ever present and often closer to Carol & Jack than anyone would like to admit, his path inevitably crosses with theirs towards the end of the story.

The finale is much as anyone would expect - no surprises at all - so after a disappointing start there's a disappointing ending too. Unfortunately this is the first book I have read by Robert Crais who otherwise has a fine reputation and several best sellers to his credit. I can only assume that they were finer stories than "Demolition Angel" and I look forward to reviewing him more favourably in future.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Good Plot And Procedure, Characters So-So, Jan 14 2004
By J H Murphy "Hank Murphy" (Agoura, California USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This was the fifth Crais book I'd read. It's a departure from his Elvis Cole series. Overall, pretty good. The police procedural aspects are reasonably well done - he has a commendable disclaimer at the front indicating that this book won't tell you how to build or defuse a bomb. I'd just read three of Paul Bishop's Fey Croaker series, and the contrast between the female protagonists was not in this books' favor. OTOH, this book has a large number of characters, which makes it harder to develop as deep a sense of a protagonist's personality. So, an interesting change from the Elvis series, and a better than average read - recommended.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Carol Starkey is a detective. She's also a drunk.
The books of Robert Crais are a revelation in series mystery/thrillers. Friends recommended his satirical, well-sketched detective, Elvis Cole to me some months ago. Read more
Published on Dec 29 2003 by L. Quido

5.0 out of 5 stars Demolition Angel
Three years ago Carol Starkey, a top-notch bomb squad technician came back from the dead. Her partner and lover
died. Read more
Published on April 11 2003 by AllAboutMurder

4.0 out of 5 stars great police drama; a real page-turner
'Demolition Angel' is a real treat. The author delves into the world of bomb disposal experts and the scary individuals who develop such bombs for kicks ("bombers without a... Read more
Published on Feb 24 2003 by lazza

4.0 out of 5 stars Bang Bang. You're hooked!
I like Robert Crais. I'm one of many. People often have, at least I do, ambivalent feelings about our favorite writers exploring uncharted territory. Read more
Published on Feb 8 2003 by Larry Scantlebury

5.0 out of 5 stars When a book is a six stars book?
You can rate a book up to 6 stars when:

1) No matter where you are: a stadium, at work, at the movies, etc. Read more

Published on Nov 18 2002 by Jorge Frid

5.0 out of 5 stars Great book, beginning to end
This was a great book. I had not read any Robert Crais books prior to reading Demolition Angel. I liked the book well enough to explore other books by Crais and am in the... Read more
Published on Nov 6 2002 by Debs

4.0 out of 5 stars Tough and gritty
Carol Starkey is a bomb squad technician who is now working with L.A.P.D.'s criminal conspiracy section. Read more
Published on Oct 16 2002 by Beverley Strong

5.0 out of 5 stars Sustained Suspense
Carol Starky is an interesting character. She is strong/weak, tough/vulnerable, and a little crude. Read more
Published on Jul 16 2002 by N. Sausser

3.0 out of 5 stars Been there, Done that
Carol Starkey is the only character you can be sure about. Former bomb tech, now homicide detective is fighting the demons of her past as she confronts a fatal bomb explosion that... Read more
Published on Jul 14 2002 by Douglas De Bono - Author of No...

5.0 out of 5 stars good stand-alone
this book is actually teetering on the halfway mark between four and five.

This is a very good standalone novel from Crais. The plot is good, very original. Read more

Published on April 26 2002 by RachelWalker

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