The Black Angel by John Connolly

The Black Angel (Charlie Parker, #5)

by John Connolly

The Black Angel is not an object. The Black Angel is not a myth. The Black Angel lives. A young woman goes missing from the streets of New York. Those who have taken her believe that nobody cares about her, and that no one will come looking for her. They are wrong. She is 'blood' to the killer Louis, the man who stands at the right hand of private detective Charlie Parker, and Louis will tear apart anyone who stands in the way of his attempts to find her. But as Louis' violent search progresses, Parker comes to realize that the disappearance is part of an older mystery, one that is linked to an ornate church of bones in Eastern Europe, to the slaughter at a French monastery in 1944, and to the quest for a mythical prize that has been sought for centuries by evil men: the Black Angel. Yet, the Black Angel is more than a myth. It is conscious. It dreams. It is alive. And men are not the only creatures that seek it ...

Reviewed by empressbrooke on

4 of 5 stars

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The 5th Charlie Parker novel steps up the doom and gloom with a religious mystery that starts with the disappearance of Louis' niece. As with any Parker book, the initial disappearance he's asked to investigate is only the tip of the iceberg.

Connolly is a nearly impeccable writer, as always, but I found myself easily distracted while reading. What should have taken me a few days stretched out to an entire week, and I think it's because of how many times the point of view switched. Parker's narrative would start to gain some traction, and then it would switch to a flashback from the 1500s, or to various antagonists, or to Louis' niece or her friend. It definitely gave a fuller view of the story, but it made for a bumpy reading experience.

Regardless, I'm as eager as ever to pick up the next book in the series and find out what's up next for Parker, especially after the downbeat ending. Connolly isn't a predictable author, so I have no idea if Parker's life will continue on this dark path or if Connolly is moving his character to a more satisfying end.

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  • Started reading
  • 23 January, 2010: Finished reading
  • 23 January, 2010: Reviewed