Critic Reviews
Great
Based on 11 reviews on
"Required reading for anyone who appreciates tough, unflinching intelligence and ingenious plotting." --The New York Times
Mick "Scorcherˮ Kennedy is the star of the Dublin Murder Squad. He plays by the books and plays hard, and thatʼs how the biggest case of the year ends up in his hands.
On one of the half-abandoned "luxuryˮ developments that litter Ireland, Patrick Spain and his two young children have been murdered. His wife, Jenny, is in intensive care. At first, Scorcher thinks itʼs going to be an easy solve, but too many small things canʼt be explained: the half-dozen baby monitors pointed at holes smashed in the Spainsʼ walls, the files erased from the familyʼs computer, the story Jenny told her sister about a shadowy intruder slipping past the houseʼs locks. And this neighborhood--once called Broken Harbor--holds memories for Scorcher and his troubled sister, Dina: childhood memories that Scorcher thought he had tightly under control.
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A tense psychological mystery that will keep you guessing until the end, Lisa’s Staff Pick is Broken Harbor by Tana French: https://t.co/3nRz1W6Xvb https://t.co/W7T1K5V5sn
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Army Acute Care Surgeon. Christian. PGY 14. Runner. Founder of ABS-CE Prep (https://t.co/gCEImSEeqc) *thoughts are my own* @doc_on_the_run@med-mastodon.com
Broken Harbor. Well-written whodunnit, maintains suspense. There is one plot line in the middle that gets drawn out a bit longer than necessary, but still all around good read. Whole series is good (don’t worry if you haven’t read the other books). https://t.co/xJYgSOtosS
"Ms. French creates 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... she has irresistibly sly ways of toying with readers' expectations"
--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 list--it's definitely at the top of mine."
--Associated Press
"a tour de force."
--Laura Miller, Salon.com
"In most crime novels, cood cops and decent people court tragedy by disobeying the rules of society. But the stories French tells reflect our own savage times: the real trouble starts when you play fair and do exactly as you're told."
--Marilyn Stasio, The New York Times Book Review
"French's psychologically rich novels are so much more satisfying than your standard issue police procedural...French brilliantly evokes the isolation of a Gothic landscape out of the Brontes and transposes it to a luxury suburban development gone bust. The cause, of course, is Ireland's economic free fall -- the Celtic Tiger turned needy cub -- and, like all superior detective fiction, French's novels are as much social criticism as they are whodunit."
-Maureen Corrigan, NPR's Fresh Air
"French ...[is] 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 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
"Broken Harbour is a novel, of course, but it's also a headline...it's good to see contemporary literature engaging a crisis that has had such an impact on the lives of so many. This is, in fact, what good literature does. It makes us look at our world and perhaps forces us to see what we have chosen to ignore."
--Los Angeles Times