• FalconClaw

  • The Sleep Room
  • By: Michael Cook
  • Narrated by: Virtual Voice
  • Length: 12 hrs and 4 mins
  • 5.0 out of 5 stars (1 rating)

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FalconClaw  By  cover art

FalconClaw

By: Michael Cook
Narrated by: Virtual Voice
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Publisher's summary

On New Year’s Eve 2016, a Philadelphia Detective, crippled by grief and his endless pursuit to avenge his father’s death, is thrown into a case that could possibly bring him the retribution he seeks.

Frank Collazo’s partner, Penny Bristow, will soon seek retaliation of her own. Detectives Collazo and Bristow will be tasked with chasing down the most notorious serial killer that the City of Philadelphia has ever known.

Their pasts will become their present, and their present will become their hell, as a monster, both sinister and cunning, will make the detectives question everything they know and each other.

The diabolical acts of one man will destroy the lives of many and lead Frank Collazo to a place of ultimate redemption or complete and utter damnation.

Editorial Review: Criminal Activity Blog: Elias J. McClellan - Crime Writer

Michael Cook’s FalconClaw: like Old Man Winter, FC follows Philadelphia Detectives Penny and Frank on their investigation that begins with a disappearance and quickly turns to a murder. Like OMW, FC is set in northern Philadelphia.

Where OMW was set in 1974 and reads two beats away from a cozy mystery, FC is current, 2016-street-level honest. This is intended as praise for an author capable enough, and brave enough to stretch beyond a sub-genre that he has succeeded in as well as a heads-up for the reader expecting the same song with a different tune.

Far from the paternal Frank Bruno, Frank Collazo struggles with an attraction to his partner. He struggles even more once he realizes that the attraction may be mutual. Unlike Penny Bryce, Penny Bristow cusses like a cop who rolled patrol before she became a detective. So, again, a cozy this is not.

What hasn't changed is Cook’s gift for nailing what moves these characters. As in OMW, ghosts haunt the characters of FC.

Frank and Penny are both recovering from failed marriages. However Frank is also haunted by his long-dead father as well as his young son. He fears that he will fail his son as he fears he has failed his father’s memory.

The storied 39th District is also haunted by a past of failed investigations as well as generational prejudices. Cook uses the 39th to reflect how hope can spring from the bones of fear and hatred. While Penny Bryce faced hazing and was often outright ignored in 1974, in 2016 the 39th is skippered by Captain Rosalyn Sumner, the first female African American command officer.

It’s still Philly and there are still a swath of Irish and Italian representation. But Ali Ashfaq is the uniform police officer constantly at Frank and Penny’s side. More than simply diversity “service,” Ashfaq and Sumner reflect the real-world progression in major cities across the U.S. and it is a joy to read about cities and police that look like my city and my police.

What remains the same is the tight-rope nature of high-stakes investigations and Cook nails that here. Where the cold was the specter of the times in OMW, here it is the smell of squad rooms long outdated and overwhelmed. Haunted, even.

Without giving anything away, I can say our killer is also haunted. Unlike many serial killers exercising psycho-sexual compulsions our killer is motivated by revenge for deep familia wounds. Much like our heroes.

What Cook does well in FC is keeping the focus on the hunters, their hunt for the killer is far more engrossing than what makes the “Schuylkiller” tick.

While the tone is different, the focus and the killer are completely different. Cook has retained is his sensibility for the reader. There is violence, but this is no gore-fest. While there is coarse language, indeed, grown-up discussions, there is no explicit sexual scenes or any sexual violence.

Cook’s book is a taut, fast read at 400 pages with great background on the factual people and events that shaped this work of fiction. It’s also a lot of fun.

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Powerful follow-up to Old Man Winter.

This author writes compelling dramas packed with vivid scenery, evoking raw emotion. Good stuff. I lived in Philly back in the day and this book took me back there, and I enjoyed my visit. Now on to FalconClaw Säters, the third book in the series.

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