Ebook Info
- Published: 2010
- Number of pages: 557 pages
- Format: Epub
- File Size: 0.51 MB
- Authors: Dennis Lehane
Description
Boston private investigators Patrick Kenzie and Angela Gennaro are hired to find four-year-old Amanda McCready.
Despite extensive news coverage and dogged investigation into her abduction, the police have uncovered nothing. The case is rife with oddities: Amanda’s indifferent mother, a couple with a history of paedophilia and a shadowy police unit. As the Indian summer fades, Amanda McCready stays gone – vanished so completely that she seems never to have existed.
When a second child disappears, Kenzie and Gennaro face a local media more interested in sensationalizing the abductions than helping to solve them, a local police force seething with lethal secrets, and a faceless power determined to obstruct their efforts. Caught in a deadly tangle of lies, and determined to unravel the riddle that is anything but child’s play, they soon discover that those who go looking for the missing may not come back alive.
User’s Reviews
Amazon.com Review Cheese Olamon, “a six-foot-two, four-hundred-and-thirty-pound yellow-haired Scandinavian who’d somehow arrived at the misconception he was black,” is telling his old grammar school friends Patrick Kenzie and Angie Gennaro why they have to convince another mutual chum, the gun dealer Bubba Rugowski, that Cheese didn’t try to have him killed. “You let Bubba know I’m clean when it comes to what happened to him. You want me alive. Okay? Without me, that girl will be gone. Gone-gone. You understand? Gone, baby, gone.” Of all the chilling, completely credible scenes of sadness, destruction, and betrayal in Dennis Lehane’s fourth and very possibly best book about Kenzie and Gennaro, this moment stands out because it captures in a few pages the essence of Lehane’s success. Private detectives Kenzie and Gennaro, who live in the same working-class Dorchester neighborhood of Boston where they grew up, have gone to visit drug dealer Cheese in prison because they think he’s involved in the kidnapping of 4-year-old Amanda McCready. Without sentimentalizing the grotesque figure of Cheese, Lehane tells us enough about his past to make us understand why he and the two detectives might share enough trust to possibly save a child’s life when all the best efforts of traditional law enforcement have failed. By putting Kenzie and Gennaro just to one side of the law (but not totally outside; they have several cop friends, a very important part of the story), Lehane adds depth and edge to traditional genre relationships. The lifelong love affair between Kenzie and Gennaro–interrupted by her marriage to his best friend–is another perfectly controlled element that grows and changes as we watch. Surrounded by dead, abused, and missing children, Kenzie mourns and rages while Gennaro longs for one of her own. So the choices made by both of them in the final pages of this absolutely gripping story have the inevitability of life and the dazzling beauty of art. Other Kenzie/Gennaro books available in paperback: Darkness, Take My Hand, A Drink Before the War, Sacred. –Dick Adler From Publishers Weekly Vanished, in this complex and unsettling fourth case for PIs Patrick Kenzie and Angie Gennaro (after Sacred, 1997) is four-year-old Amanda McCready, taken one night from her apartment in Dorchester, a working-class section of Boston, where her mother had left her alone. Kenzie and Gennaro, hired by the child’s aunt and uncle, join in an unlikely alliance with Remy Broussard and Nick Raftopoulos, known as Poole, the two cops with the department’s Crimes Against Children squad who are assigned to the case. In tracing the history of Amanda’s neglectful mother, whose past involved her with a drug lord and his minions, the foursome quickly find themselves tangling with Boston’s crime underworld and involved in what appears to be a coup among criminals. Lehane develops plenty of tension between various pairs of parties: the good guys looking for Amanda and the bad guys who may know where she is; the two PIs and the two cops; various police and federal agencies; opposing camps in the underworld; and Patrick and Angie, who are lovers as well as business partners. All is delivered with abundant violence?e.g., bloated and mutilated corpses; gangland executions; shoot-outs with weapons of prodigious firepower; descriptions of sexual abuse of small children; threats of rape and murder?that serves to make Amanda’s likely fate all the more chilling. Lehane tackles corruption in many forms as he brings his complicated plot to its satisfying resolution, at the same time leaving readers to ponder moral questions about social and individual responsibility long after the last page is turned. Author tour. Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Library Journal This fourth entry in Lehane’s series featuring Boston PIs Patrick Kenzie and Angela Gennaro has all the makings of a successful mystery: suspenseful plotting, effective dialog, strong characterization, realistic setting, and themes that are bound to hold the reader’s attention, e.g., child neglect, abuse, and kidnapping. Moreover, it asks the sort of moral question that moves it beyond the boundaries of its purported genre into the realm of serious fiction. Unfortunately, narrator Robert Lawrence provides a reading that greatly mars the story’s impact. His narration is generally uninvolved and poorly paced, as if he’d been set on automatic pilot. And while he adopts different voices for the various characters, they are often mismatched and sound more like caricatures. Occasionally he is right on target but not often enough to redeem this audio version of an otherwise fine novel. Not recommended.?Sister M. Anna Falbo CSSF, Villa Maria Coll. Lib., Buffalo, NYCopyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. From the Inside Flap The Bookcassette® format is a special recording technique developed as a means of condensing the full, unabridged audio text of a book to record it on fewer tapes. In order to listen to these tapes, you will need a cassette player with balance control to adjust left/right speaker output. Special adaptors to allow these tapes to be played on any cassette player are available through the publisher or some US retail electronics stores. From the Back Cover Boston private detectives Patrick Kenzie and Angela Gennaro are hired to find four-year-old Amanda McCready, abducted from her bed on a warm, summer night. They meet her stoned-out, strangely apathetic mother, her loving aunt and uncle, the mother’s dangerous, drug-addled friends, and two cops who’ve found so many abused or dead children they may be too far over the edge to come back. Despite enormous public attention, rabid news coverage, and dogged police work, the investigation repeatedly hits a brick wall. Led into a world of drug dealers, child molesters, and merciless executioners, Patrick and Angie are soon forced to face not only the horrors adults can perpetrate on innocents but also their own conflicted feelings about what is best, and worst, when it comes to raising children. And as the Indian summer fades and the autumn chill deepens, Amanda McCready stays gone, banished so completely that she seems never to have existed.Then another child disappears. . . . Dennis Lehane takes you into a world of triple crosses, elaborate lies, and shrouded motives, where the villains may be more moral than the victims, the missing should possibly stay missing, and those who go looking for them may not come back alive.Settle in and turn off the phone. From its haunting opening to its shocking climax, Gone, Baby, Gone is certain to be one of the most thrilling, talked-about suspense novels you read this year. From Booklist Lehane’s fourth Patrick Kenzie and Angela Gennaro mystery will further enhance the author’s growing reputation. Kenzie and Gennaro reluctantly agree to search for Amanda McCready, who has been missing for more than a year, thus dramatically reducing the chances of finding her alive. The maverick PI duo immediately smells trouble, both from the child’s druggie mother and from the uncooperative Boston police, who aren’t eager to be shown up. The case quickly proves every bit as horrifying as Kenzie and Gennaro expected: parental neglect, police corruption, and a drug deal gone bad have combined to make one innocent five-year-old the pawn in a high-stakes power struggle. Lehane combines the intensity of Andrew Vachss, who also writes unflinchingly about child-abuse and abandonment cases, with the charismatic appeal of his protagonists, a working-class Nick and Nora who walk the meanest of streets. The wrenching portrait of a bent cop whose instincts are admirable but whose actions are appalling only adds to the emotional impact of this grim, utterly unsentimental blue-collar tragedy. Bill Ott Review ” Gone, Baby, Gone is a tough, true, powerful story written by a stunningly good novelist, one of our very best.” — James Patterson”Compelling. . .just the way we like it. . .When it comes to describing the action, Mr. Lehane delivers big time.” — The Wall street Journal”Gone, Baby Gone is a tough, true powerful story written by a stunningly good novelist, one of our very best.” — James Patterson”Lehane tackles corruption in many forms as he brings his complicated plot to its satisfying resolution…” — Publishers Weekly”To the list that includes such names as Robert B. Parker and Linda Barnes, add that of Dennis Lehane.” — Chicago Tribune From AudioFile This dark story of child abduction set in the Boston area would have been better served by a reading less broad than the one provided here by Robert Lawrence. Too many simple, one-note interpretations undercut the subtlety of the well-drawn, complex characters and make those that are broad to begin with almost intolerable to be heard. Fortunately, the result is not completely ruinous, as Lawrence’s one well-conceived performance is of the first-person narrator, private investigator Patrick Kenzie, whose engaging combination of thoughtful intelligence and streetwise savvy is communicated well to the listener. This only makes me curious about why so many of the other characters in this complex tale involving hoodlums, murderers, violence and pedophilia sound like refugees from a Hanna-Barbera cartoon. J.P.M. (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine
Reviews from Amazon users, collected at the time the book is getting published on UniedVRG. It can be related to shiping or paper quality instead of the book content:
⭐ “Gone, Baby, Gone” is crime thriller novel written by Dennis Lehane. It is the fourth in a series of books about fictional Boston private investigators Patrick Kenzie and Angela Gennaro. This is an excellent work of fiction that features a dark and tense plot about important and timely subjects – namely the neglect and abuse of children, and police corruption. It provides a vivid and realistic look at how these things play out in an environment of poverty and despair.”Gone, Baby, Gone’s” setting is Dorchester, Massachusetts, a run-down, economically depressed community near Boston. Four year-old Amanda McReady has disappeared from her second-story apartment. As family, friends, and the police all desperately search for Amanda, her abusive and negligent single mother, Helene, remains coldly indifferent to her daughter’s whereabouts. Therefore, Helene’s brother, Lionel, and his wife, Beatrice, decide to hire Patrick Kenzie and Angie Gennaro, a pair of local private detectives, to help find the missing child.At first, it seems like a straightforward missing person’s case. Did Amanda simply wander away from home one night, and if so, where is she hiding? As Kenzie and Gennaro’s search for Amanda progresses, the two private eyes begin discovering evidence that indicates something more sinister might be at play – the child might have been abducted. . Soon the two private eyes find themselves on a collision course with a local drug lord, a family of automatic weapon-wielding child molesters, and a pair of hard-boiled Boston police detectives determined at all costs on preventing them from having anything to do with the case…All of this makes for a fast-paced, engrossing book of 500 pages that I finished in only three days. Dennis Lehane has populated his novel with characters that are easy to like and despise at the same time in equal measure.Those who have seen the movie “Gone Baby Gone” that’s based on this book will notice that the novel is richer and more detailed than the film. Although the movie retains the same plot structure and many of the characters are the same, it does alter many characters and plot points for the sake of simplifying the story for the screen. As good as the movie is, the book is even better. I think “Gone, Baby, Gone” is one of the best novels ever written by Dennis Lehane. Highly recommended.
⭐ This story is dark and just keeps getting darker. It’s quite different from the others but it’s very heavy subject matter once again, so not for the faint of heart. A few scenes can only be described as pure nightmare fuel but it’s an excellent book.When a four year old goes missing in their neighborhood, Patrick and Angie say there’s nothing they could do because the police are already on it. They’ve had enough trauma to last a lifetime and both come to terms with those experiences so they won’t risk upsetting the balance of good in their lives, potentially sacrificing their own happiness and peace of mind.They get pulled in eventually anyway. There’s a new cast of characters to meet when Angie and Patrick team up with the Boston PD detectives leading the case and quick friendships are formed. Bubba Rogowski plays an integral role in one of the most critical points of the story, which I love because Bubba is one of my all-time favorite characters. The depth of the characters and the complexity of their relationships is one of Lehane’s gifts and this book is no different. There are many twists and turns here but it’s perfectly crafted.The suspense and emotion in this story are palpable. The ending will shock some readers who never saw it coming but even if it’s not a surprise, it’s extremely powerful. The line between good and evil is very fine here and we once again have a case that will change our heroes forever.
⭐ A 4-year-old girl disappears without a trace from her Sagamore Street home in Dorchester. Amanda McCready’s mom had left her alone to go next door to watch TV with her friend or so that was her story to the detectives and others later involved with the case. The child was kidnapped that night.Lieutenant Jack Doyle of Crimes Against Children (CAC) founded the unit and brought over Officers Poole and Broussard to assist the squad in their mission. Lt. Doyle was immediately brought in to investigate the missing child disappearance.Beatrice, Amanda’s aunt, contacted private eyes she’d seen in the media who worked to find kidnapped kids. She would do whatever it took including bankrupting the family to hire Angela Gennaro and Patrick Kenzie to find Amanda.Lieutenant Doyle tried to warn them away on their first meeting indicating that he had leverage from an unsolved murder he could dump into their laps. Then he played to their soft side to not take the case for it could end badly for the family and them.Angie and Patrick really didn’t want to take the case for it brought back painful memories of an unsolved case. But, there was something about this one and the constant pleading from Beatrice that made them finally agree to the case. They informed Lieutenant Doyle of their plans and he warned them not to release info to the media and other ground rules that would keep just the CAC and them in the loop.Then things began to unwind as they uncovered Amanda’s mom had stolen $200,000 from a drug dealer just before her child disappears. Strung out, Helene McCready finally owned up to stealing the money when a drug deal turned bad. Now it appeared that Amanda McCready was kidnapped because of her mom’s involvement.The private eyes and Detective Broussard met with Cheese at the prison. He was the drug kingpin who supposedly got robbed. They planned to strike a deal where they would return his drug money for the little girl. Cheese would have nothing to do with it and told the PI’s they weren’t seeing things clearly.That didn’t stop the detective and private eyes from finding someone within the organization to make the swap. It seemed while Cheese was in the tank his top man was making a run with his competition for his business. The detectives and private eyes would do anything to bring the little girl home. Their plan fell into place when they received a call to meet at the quarries to swap the $200,000 for Amanda McCready.The police force had blocked all the routes out of the quarry and the two detectives and private eyes were instructed where to go. The older detective, Poole, had an apparent heart attack climbing the treacherous path to the location. He told everyone to go on and call in the emergency once the little girl was found safe. The detectives were instructed by the kidnappers to go one way while the PI’s went another up the quarry wall.The PI’s found the little girl’s doll floating in a deep murky water filled gorge. Angie immediately stripped and dove into the cold water to find Amanda McCready. She came up empty-handed after several dives while being rocketed by bullets from automatic weapons. The helicopter the police brought in couldn’t reach her. She met Patrick and the others later at the pick-up location down the hill and found the two competing drug dealers dead in a car. Police combed the area all night and the next day for the little girl. She wasn’t found. Detective Poole was taken to the hospital where he was listed in critical condition.The private eyes, Angie and Patrick, realized they’d reached a dead-end going that route. They made another attempt to rescue Amanda McCready by visiting Cheese, the drug dealer in prison. They had new ammunition since Bubba Rogowski, their friend, had gotten hit over the head while acting as their backup at the quarry. Although Cheese was a mighty big man, Bubba scared him to death whether on the inside or out. He knew he’d get him and the PI’s wanted to use that in their favor. It kind of worked only he wouldn’t give up the name/s of the kidnappers immediately. He had something to do or someone he needed talk to first. The Cheese didn’t live another 24 hours. He slipped on a wet floor and fell 40 ft. to his death. They were back to square one without a clue to Amanda McCready’s location.Angie and Patrick, the private eyes questioned themselves and one another about continuing the case. They rehashed everything they knew until their old friend Bubba asked Patrick to play backup on one of his deliveries. It was a small neighborhood where everyone knows everyone – cops, PI’s, drug dealers, addicts, prostitutes – you get the picture! The Dorchester boys/girls never forget the good or bad.Bubba had his reasons for asking Patrick’s backup for his delivery. But, that could wait until later. He had high-powered firearms to deliver and collect the cash. On delivery, the buyer wanted the firing clips immediately that went with the guns. Bubba wouldn’t let him have them until he counted his money and that took a while for he was constantly interrupted and had to begin counting again. Finally, the buyer’s woman came out with her gun and this didn’t stop Bubba’s counting his money either. In the end, there was gunfire from the woman and others who found hidden weapons stashed in unlikely places to shoot at them. Bubba made an opening where the door once was and they got away. Bubba didn’t leave them the clips for the automatic weapons he sold them.After getting safely away from the firepower, Patrick realized why Bubba had asked for him to ride along. There was something about the man that struck a memory. He had seen that face in one of the mug shots Detective Broussard had shown him of a perpetrator that did ungodly things to children. This might be a new lead in the case of finding the missing Amanda McCready and arresting her kidnappers.Patrick’s hunches began to unravel unseemly things about the investigators and the case. His doubts were verified by an agent from the Justice Department who had already figured it out. He warned he and Angie about their safety now that they knew too. This realization made him take a new look at himself, his friends, cops, and his relationship with Angie. He wondered if they could stand the testing this case had placed on them.Was there any way the private eyes and detectives from the CAC could work together now to solve the mystery and bring Amanda McCready home? Was there any way this little girl could come out a winner from her unfit mother and kidnappers? Gone, Baby, Gone: A Novel (Patrick Kenzie and Angela Gennaro Book 4)
⭐ I agree with many other reviewers that this is the best of the Kenzie and Gennaro series. The themes covered- child abuse and kidnapping, while dark are not excessively lurid, and you can read Lehane’s portrayals without losing your lunch.A toddler, Amanda McCready has gone missing and Kenzie and Gennaro are brought in by the family to assist the police. Twists and turns abound and the two find that this is not a simple kidnapping for ransom, but something much darker.A tightly plotted tale with great real-to-life characters.Dialogue and narrative-top notch.Highly recommended. It will help to have read other books in the series, but not absolutely necessary.
⭐ This is a very well-written book, but I was turned off by the author’s use of extremely repulsive violence against children. This was way over the top for my taste in thrillers and murder mysteries. I think it’s a great book for what it is, but I wouldn’t read anything else by this author unless I could assure myself that it didn’t deal with such ugliness as this one does.
⭐ Don’t judge a book by its movie, right? I absolutely LOVED the film version of Gone Baby Gone, so much so that I went right out and grabbed Moonlight Mile, the sequel book, which I also loved. I noticed a couple of discrepancies between the first movie and the second book, the most notable being that in the film version of GBG, Bea and Lionel were a childless couple. A son was mentioned in Moonlight Mile.Before I get too far off-track, Gone Baby Gone is the story of Amanda McCready, a four-year-old girl who’s gone missing from her mother, Helene’s, `unlocked’ apartment. Helene is an unfit parent, no two ways about that, and her brother, Lionel, and his wife, Beatrice (Bea), step in where they can to fill the void left by her absentee parenting. When Amanda goes missing, Bea hires Patrick Kenzie and Angie Genarro, two private detectives, to augment the police investigation, which immediately (and conveniently) turns up no leads. Patrick and Angie are reluctant to take the case, having found too many dead kids and unwilling to face the personal toll it takes on them, again. Something about Bea changes their minds. The deeper they look into Helene, the more shady characters emerge from her drug muling past as probably suspects in Amanda’s kidnapping.I’m going to stop there to avoid spoilers, but I’m going to go back to the film/book comparison because while so often Hollywood destroys a story with the cutting of scenes to pare down run time, in GBG’s case, the film did some things really right. The book features an extended cast of characters, including Bea’s son, which detracts from the believability that she’d go so far to `save Amanda’. There’s a line in the film where Helene criticizes Bea for `God making her barren’ (Helene is an ignorant, hateful character), and that simple fact made me believe that Bea would mortgage everything down to her socks to save this child who is, by proxy, `hers’.Several of the characters names were changes, as were their descriptions, the most notable being Cheese “Olamon” who was an overweight white inmate in the book, and was a Haitian drug lord in the movie. Remy Broussard is Remy Bressant in the movie, and his partner Poole, was much less present. A drug transaction between Bubba and the Trents (in the movie) was a gun transaction in the book, but the end result of that grisly scene is the same. These minor changes were no big deal, but there’s a football scene in the book that I, not being a sports fan, didn’t enjoy, and it dragged on across a couple of chapters. The book seemed to take the long way around to the things the movie managed to accomplish in a line or two of succinct dialogue.All in all, the story is incredible, but if you’ve seen the movie and enjoyed it, you, like me, might find the book a bit less powerful. The book deals a lot in low-level crime and more so in the police angle than in the Kenzie and Genarro’s dynamic. Angie is particularly unlikeable in the book, by comparison. Her squeaky clean movie image was tainted by her chain smoking, tough girl persona in the book. Helene’s character was lost in the book, which seemed less about Amanda and more about the Boston PD. I give the book four stars because I’m a Lehane fan and I’m not sure I can rate the book objectively since the translation to film was my biggest hang-up. I know, in my heart, that’s wrong. But I liked Moonlight Mile better.
⭐ On my kindle. Read 1st 3 books, decided to read them all. These are Nick and Nora Charles trope books with the smart mouth reparte but without the marriage or the dog and in a Boston setting of the late 1990s. Suspend disbelief with the very vicious villains, but enjoy the descriptions, character development, and the way Lehane moves Patrick and Angela in their romantic dance. Their are 6 books in all, the last written 10 years after the 5th. Read all of them in order and enjoy.
⭐ Gone, Baby, Gone – Dennis LehanneThis is the fourth book in the Boston Private Investigators Patrick Kenzie/Angela Gennaro series. These books are considered an excellent series. As well as this series, Lehanne’s pieces of work also include “Mystic River” and “Shutter Island.” Dennis is a fine author if one likes this genre.Patrick and Angela are hired to find a kidnapped little girl, Amanda Cready by Helene’s brother and sister-in-law at the prodding of the sister-in-law. The media swarms the case. The police are all over it shadowing Kenzie’s and Gennaro’s every move, often even to the point of orchestrating the PI’s moves to a point. And where is the FBI? Is this not a kidnapping? What’s up?Amanda’s mother Helene is a real piece of work. She doesn’t really provide, she does a lot of drugs, and she drinks constantly, and she quite often leaves Amanda unattended. In short, she is a terrible mother.Then she and another piece of work that Helene sometimes dates for lack of a better word go to Philadelphia and have the audacity to steal $200,000 of drug money. They are under the radar. Everyone believes this is why Amanda is kidnapped, that is, except the bad guys.Amanda still does not turn up. Are Patrick, Angela and the police on the wrong track? They follow a few bad leads with expected results. Then, another child comes up missing. All involved close in on this and there are a few bad people killed in a shoot-out, along with a detective. A dead child is found, also, but still no Amanda.Then something happens big, really big. It appears that perhaps the case may be solved after all. In fact, the case may be solved rather quickly. But, sometimes solving a case is not all it is cracked up to be.”Gone Baby Gone” was a really good book. I am glad that I read it, and would have no problem recommending it to anyone. I was not a fan of “Shutter Island” so please don’t put any emphasis on that book. This was a really good movie, too if only a little dark. It was directed by Ben Affleck, and his brother Casey Affleck played Patrick. Angela was played by Michelle Monighan (one of my personal favorite). Morgan Freeman and Ed Harris also appear in the movie. So, check it out. You won’t regret it.
⭐ This book is captivating and disturbing. It is about Amanda McCready, a four year old who is neglected by her troubled mother and who goes missing. What seems to be a simple missing child case becomes more complicated as drug lords, dirty cops and paedophiles are thrown into the fold.The book is set in a part of Boston that is teeming with troubled individuals burdened by poverty and the scars of less than perfect childhoods. Unfortunately, nobody can catch a break in this town. The sadness in this bleak town seeps into you as you read this book and you begin to understand all the characters. You begin to sympathize with them. Even the bad guys. Even the good guys who break some of the rules. And that is the point Lehane is trying to make. Who are we to judge people? Who are we to judge what is right or wrong? Right and wrong is too black and white. What is right and wrong depends on the situation. What is right and wrong depends on someone’s motives for doing something. And if someone had good intentions can we forgive them for doing something bad? These are the tough questions that you’ll be asking yourself as you read this book.This is the third Lehane book I’ve read and the man is a master of mystery and suspense. Just when you think you’ve got him all figured out he throws in an incredible twist and his job as an author is always well done because he keeps you guessing until the very end.
⭐ Gone, Baby, Gone is the 2nd Dennis Lehane novel I’ve read. He writes a good story, and this novel is no exception. I haven’t read any of the others in this series, but might recommend you do so before diving into this book.We’re taken into a very dark underworld in this story, almost a bit much for me actually, and I usually like my crime fiction on the dark side. The storyline is plotted perfectly, though near the very end, I wanted it to be over. Lehane occasionally overwrites IMO and despite the pacing I found myself skipping some paragraphs. The action scenes are very well written, and our 2 protagonists, Kenzie and Gennaro have emotional depth.I was led through all the suspects without guessing how the ending would turn out. It satisfied me. This one is a good read.
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