• The Bloomsday Dead

  • By: Adrian McKinty
  • Narrated by: Gerard Doyle
  • Length: 10 hrs and 56 mins
  • 4.5 out of 5 stars (2,369 ratings)

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The Bloomsday Dead

By: Adrian McKinty
Narrated by: Gerard Doyle
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Publisher's summary

In this concluding book of Adrian McKinty's highly praised Dead series, Michael Forsythe confronts his former lover and archrival, Bridget, a New York Irish Mob boss.

Michael has survived his infiltration of an IRA splinter cell in Boston, and now, his many near fatal wounds healed, he begins his next adventure as manager of hotel security in Lima, Peru. It is there that he is contacted by Bridget, whose fiancé he killed.

Bridget, calling from Dublin, says that her 11-year-old daughter has been kidnapped. Michael's choice is to fly to Dublin and help her find the girl, or be executed at the hands of Bridget's goons, who are holding him at gunpoint. He agrees to nothing, but is soon on the way to Dublin, leaving the first two of many dead bodies in his wake.

Don't miss these other noir thrillers in the Michael Forsythe series: Dead I Well May Be (Unabridged) and The Dead Yard (Unabridged).
©2007 Adrian McKinty (P)2007 Blackstone Audio Inc.

Critic reviews

"[H]is most visceral, satisfying effort yet....McKinty writes masterful action scenes, and he whips up a frenzy as the bullets begin to fly." (Publishers Weekly)
"[O]utpaces its immediate predecessor, The Dead Yard...with [McKinty's] trademark dark lyricism, one great red herring, and a masterful plot twist that brings Forsythe's character full circle in a lightning flash." (Booklist)

What listeners say about The Bloomsday Dead

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars

SIX STARS ******

After slogging through a number of adequate audible books recently, I jumped at the opportunity to acquire the latest McKinty. I was so taken with the first chapter that I called my husband when I reached the end of the first chapter just to revel in the fine writing and reading. Today, I hit my parking space near the end of the first download and sat in the lot until the chapter ended. There is absolutely no better combination of writer and reader in the Audible library!

If you have not listened to any of the other McKintys, do NOT start with this one. Do the "Dead" series in sequence.

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17 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Michael Forsyth - The Legend Continues!

Adrian McGinty stories are tornado-twisty! And Michael Forsyth is 'the' Irish super-dark-hero. You gotta' start this series with "Dead I May Well Be" the first in this epic. Oh, this book stands on its own bottom but you'll like it enough to want to read the other two in the trilogy only to discover that you began at the ending.

Some reviewers are shocked… SHOCKED! That Michael Forsyth and his hair-trigger mob buddies talk like men. If you are shocked… SHOCKED! By the way that men talk in ugly and dangerous situations… Well, go find a teenage romance novel or maybe a Disney story about unicorns and dancing bunnies, K? Sigh.

BTW, McGinty has the power to make you laugh out loud in complex moments. Oh… Of course I gotta' mention Gerard Doyle's narration… Okay… "WOW!" You got a better superlative? Fill it in here __________. Thanks.

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14 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Another Amazing Book

Adrian McKinty has fast become one of my favorite authors and Gerard Doyle is a spectacular narrator. This third installment of the Michael Forsythe series is tremendous. It would be useful to have listened/read to the two prior installments, and absolutely essential to have read Dead I May Well Be before Bloomsday Dead. I will be in serious withdrawal until McKinty comes out with his next book.

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14 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars

McKinty and Doyle: a perfect pair

I have listened to every title that Adrian McKinty and Gerard Doyle have collaborated on as writer and reader. They are so perfectly suited as complements to each other, that I can not imagine one without the other.

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars

Ack, What Happened?

Oh dear. McGinty went over the top with this one. The first two Forsythe books stretched credibility, but the credibility was there. In this novel at one point Forsythe contemplates the fact that his life is not unlike that of a "Mexican soap opera." The sad news is, that this is indeed what this book and his life have become. McGinty pulls out every predictable cliche (I won't list them all here as spoilers though I'm tempted to because any astute reader will groan early on...oh I *hope* he's not going to go down this predictable path). Forsythe keeps saying to himself that his life is "over the top" in this book -- and it is and has been before, but in "Bloomsday Dead," McGinty has simply gone too far, he's toppled off the top into a heap of pastiche and cliche, almost tainting the power of the first two books. Sigh. What a sad way to end the saga.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Great ending to a thriller series!!

The Bloomsday Dead is the third and final book in Adrian McKinty's wonderful Michael Forsythe thriller series. It is definitely best read after Dead I Well May Be and The Dead Yard, but it can also stand on its own. Forsythe in the earlier books quit the Irish mafia, testified against some of them, and was placed in the US witness protection. Rather than give away the plot, I'll just say that this book ends the story of gangster Micheal Forsythe perfectly and his future is bright indeed.

For those not accustomed to Adrian McKinty the Forsythe novels are a great introduction. McKinty is among the best thriller writers living today. Every one of his books is superb. This series is over a decade old. His current novels are mostly in his Sean Duffy series. I recommend all of them.

McKinty is one of those authors who found an outstanding narrator for his audiobooks and stayed with him. Gerard Doyle is one of the best.

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6 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars

Great pulp fiction, and perfect narration

I loved the first two in this series, "Dead I Well May Be" and "Dead Yard". If you enjoy a good story of swearing, drinking, lusting, and killing, you should love this. This third book (and I'm about 75% done) is even more over the top with it's cliff hangers and close calls than the first two, which may be fitting for a swan song. Logic, realism and character depth? Hell no! But grit, blood, lust and revenge. Yeah, more of that please. Oh, and the narration fits the first person tale perfectly. Ya wee shite!

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars

Good story; Charming reader

This was my first book by McKinty, and I will download the others.
Michael goes about the most outrageous business with humor and introspection and with that lovely Irish lilt. It would be hard not to be captivated by it all.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars

Adrian McKinty is now on my favorite author list

This continue the story started by "Dead I Very Well Maybe". You will want to hear this one, an excellent listen with all the right Irish and NYC accents. The story has a big twist at the end. I heard this in 2 days and all my yardwork got done.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

It was going great.....until the last 30 seconds

This is the best of the series, and I really hope it isn't the last, but not just because I love the decent ex-gang member with a heart of gold and a sense of humour. Because the last 30 seconds of this book left us with an unrealistic and implausible "happily ever after" ending, and I would love to see what really becomes of the characters (Bridget, Michael, Siobhan) in the future. Happy, maybe, but not forever more, I'm sure.

But this book was written 10 years ago, so I know there won't be any more, and the Sean Duffy series (and some stand alone novels) are moving forward instead.

But don't let the last 30 seconds keep you from enjoying this great Northern Irish noir novel. Time has moved on and Michael goes to Belfast from his new job in Lima at the request of mob boss Bridget to help find her kidnapped daughter, with the promise that if he succeeds she will stop trying to find and kill him in revenge for his past deeds. Along the way, there are kidnapping attempts, murder attempts, killings, humour, and pathos.

As in the other McKinty books, the narration by Gerard Doyle is perfection.

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5 people found this helpful