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Shadow Men
 
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Shadow Men [Audiobook] [MP3 Audio] [Unabridged] (MP3 CD)

by Jonathon King (Author), David Colacci (Reader)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
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From Publishers Weekly

Though moody ex-Philadelphia cop Max Freeman has found a measure of peace in life, he faces some of the same challenges in King's third stellar outing as he did in last year's Visible Darkness. Government types are still trying to evict him from his Everglades hideaway, his love life is tenuous and friend/attorney Billy Manchester has once again piqued his interest with a case. Max, now a fully licensed PI in Florida, agrees to look into the disappearance of a father and two sons who signed on for three weeks of work on the Tamiami Trail 80 years earlier and never made it home. Built across the Everglades, the trail is the stuff of legend, filled with murky water and murkier deeds, snakes and gators and untimely death. The case, of course, is more complicated than it seems, with corporate intrigue, intimidation and the sins of fathers raining unmercifully down on their sons. As usual, Max is aided by a lively cast of characters, including the mysterious Nate Brown, whose knowledge of the Glades and its secrets is part of his being. King strikes a deft balance between his extraordinary South Florida setting and an engrossing tale of inhumanity and greed. This fine novel resonates with the atmosphere and immediacy of the Everglades, as well as with Max's struggle to define himself in an often hostile world.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From AudioFile

Even though you know where this story is going right from the get-go, you can't stop listening. The charm of this mystery is in the way it's written--and read. Former Philadelphia cop Max Freeman, who retired himself after shooting a child, lives in an isolated shack in the Florida Everglades. He's called upon to investigate an eighty- year-old triple murder by the grandson of one of the victims. As Freeman uncovers clue after clue, he begins to believe that the 1924 deaths might be linked to a string of present-day serial killings. David Colacci seems to realize that the writer's strengths lie in character and atmosphere. It's here, also, that Colacci excels. Whether he's portraying Freeman, a wizened 80-year-old Everglades guide, or Freeman's stuttering lawyer friend, he's at the top of his game. And when he's taking you through the untold marvels of the 'Glades, you're right there in the skiff. A.L.H. © AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.

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Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
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4.5 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Third In The Series: Shadow Men by Jonathon King, Jun 27 2004
By Kevin Tipple (Plano, Texas) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Shadow Men (Hardcover)
This third novel in the series finds Max Freeman still living his self imposed exile deep in the Florida Everglades. Picking up a short time after the events depicted in "A Visible Darkness," Max is still able to live in his shack. His isolation, except for the occasional private investigator job for his friend and attorney, Billy Manchester, has allowed him to slowly come to grips with his actions extensively detailed in the first novel "The Blue Edge Of Midnight." However, the past still bothers him and he sees his pain reflected in the eyes of Billy's latest client.

Mark Mayes is a college student in Atlanta, Georgia and is considering going into the seminary. But, before he can do that, he needs answers about a painful family legacy. Mayes has found a number of letters, yellowed and brittle with age, in his grandmother's attic. The letters seem to indicate that his great-grandfather and two uncles who died in 1923 while working for a private company trying to build the first road across the Everglades may have been murdered. That road became the Tamiami Trail and like his long dead relatives something rarely spoken of in his family. If they were murdered, possibly on behalf of the company that was the law to itself in the merciless swamp, Mayes wants to take legal action against the company assuming it or some form of it still exists.

The great building projects have always taken many lives. The Tamiami Trail is no different in that it too is built upon the bones of the dead. But, as Max reads the copies of the letters again in lantern light in his shack, he too is struck by the power of the letters and the message of fear and desperation they convey. Something sinister was at work then and is still at work today resulting on an attempt on Max's life and other efforts to warn him off even before he starts work. It soon becomes clear that there are some that don't care to have the past uncovered and will stop at nothing to keep it that way.

While little is added to the development of the Max Freeman character, the author manages to skillfully build on the characters of others by way of two engaging secondary storylines involving characters familiar to readers of this series. Written with a prose style that reminds the reader of James Lee Burke where a few words create a powerful mental image, Jonathon King consistently brings the beauty of the Everglades alive as well as the despair and evil that lurks in the hearts of some. This author is one of the very few that can pull the reader in so deeply into his world while he delivers a complex and twisting tale of murder and deceit. His books are escapist literature and instead are far from it as they leave mental images not soon forgotten.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Move over, Michael Connelly and Dennis Lehane!, Jun 20 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Shadow Men (Hardcover)
Jonathon King thanks his friend Michael Connelly in the acknowledgments for SHADOW MEN, and it's as if he has somehow channeled Connelly, Dennis Lehane, and John D. MacDonald. All of King's three books are very good, but this one is the best -- weaving a 70-year-old mystery with the tangled past and present of protagonist Max Freeman, a former Philadelphia cop now living in a shack in the Florida Everglades. It's very well plotted, and the secondary characters are nicely drawn. King's descriptions of Florida are so evocative you can hear the waves on the beach and breathe the humid air of the Glades. (Maybe he channels James Lee Burke, too. Don't miss the quick reference to a cap from "Robicheaux's Dock and Bait Shop.") Jonathon King deserves to be much better known than he is. You saw it here first!
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4.0 out of 5 stars "Something was coming...I knew I would not welcome it", May 29 2004
By Sebastian Fernandez (Tampa, Florida United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Shadow Men (Hardcover)
Edgar Award winning author Jonathon King presents his third novel in the Max Freeman series. I have really enjoyed all three books and specially like the way in which the author allows us glimpses of Max's past in each of the novels, letting us build an ever-growing detailed depiction of the main character. In the previous books, we found out about the episode that made Max leave the Philly police department and "retire" to the Everglades; now King takes us deeper into the relationship between Max and his father.

Billy, Max's attorney and best friend, has a client that found a bunch of letters from one of his ancestors who worked along with his two sons in the construction of the Tamiami Trail. The letters describe the hardships they had to go through, as well as a series of "accidents" suffered by some of the workers who decided they had enough and tried to leave the project and return to civilization. At one point the letters stopped and nobody ever heard from the three men again. Billy requests Max's help in investigating what happened, and this make some people very nervous.

At the same time, the DA is trying to evict Max from his shack in the Everglades and someone is going through the trouble of threatening Max and attacking his dwelling. Sherry Richards, the police officer Max "discovered" and fell for in the previous novel is still around and the relationship is still on track. However, a fellow female officer of Richard's is the victim of abuse by her lover, who is also a cop, and Max and Richards end up involved in the issue. These events are the ones that get Max to recall the events from the past that relate to his father.

Jonathon King is moving forward through this series with a sure step and without losing intensity. In my particular case, I enjoy the fact that the novel is set up in the Miami / Ft. Lauderdale area, since I lived there for a couple of years and can "see" the places the author describes very clearly. Also, I have driven through the Tamiami Trail several times, and it is interesting to know at least part of the history on its construction, even though some of the facts presented by King are fiction.

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Glades and glitz, atmosphere and action
The prologue to the latest Max Freeman novel homes in on a father and his two sons as they are hunted down and shot while trying to escape the first road-building project in the... Read more
Published on May 23 2004 by Lynn Harnett

4.0 out of 5 stars He can write
I'll have to get the earlier books, because this man is a pro. He can give you the texture of the Glades and the taste of the city.
Published on May 8 2004 by John Bowes

5.0 out of 5 stars Third Book Relocates Bulk of the Action to the Everglades
I can remember reading King's debut, _The Blue Edge of Midnight_ and thinking it had best debut Edgar written all over it (it did win that award). Read more
Published on April 26 2004 by Craig Larson

4.0 out of 5 stars King really begins to hit his stride with this latest effort
Jonathon King is quickly establishing himself as a major figure in the mystery genre. His Max Freeman series is quietly but steadily showing signs of picking up where John D... Read more
Published on April 3 2004 by Bookreporter.com

4.0 out of 5 stars This series will be one of the most popular in the genre
Jonathon King was the well deserved winner of the Edgar in 2003 for Best First Novel. The question always arises-can he again write a superior and compelling murder mystery? Read more
Published on Mar 27 2004 by Larry Gandle

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