Black Water

by T. Jefferson Parker

Paper Book, 2002

Status

Available

Call number

813.54

Collection

Publication

New York : Hyperion, c2002.

Description

Fiction. Thriller. HTML: Merci Rayborn, T. Jefferson Parker's stubborn, principled Orange County detective, is almost alone in believing that deputy Archie Wildcraft didn't kill his beautiful young wife and then turn his service weapon on himself. The evidence against Wildcraft�now hospitalized with a bullet lodged in his head�seems overwhelming. But Merci, who's still unpopular for exposing an old police scandal that caused the death of one cop and the ruination of others (The Blue Hour), is resisting pressure from her boss and a headline-hunting D.A. to arrest Wildcraft and charge him with murder. Then the deputy, who's lost his memory and maybe his mind as a result of his injury, goes missing from his hospital room, intent on tracking down the real killers and managing to stay a step ahead of Merci. Soon, they both begin to realize that Gwen Wildcraft wasn't killed because she got in the way of an attempted hit on her husband�it was the other way around. Parker, whose skills at characterization are as well honed as his expert pacing and intricate plotting, has penned another standout that will keep readers guessing and gasping until the last dramatic page. �Jane Adams.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member terrybfla
First of all, I liked this core story. Well described, interesting, clever and not too contrived. I thought the books biggest drawback was that I felt like I was being loaded up with another story. Lo and behold, The Blue Hour and Red Light both come before this third book. I would STRONGLY suggest
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reading those first as the reader may then wax nostalgic over characters I really wanted to like, but never got close enough to fully embrace them - the father, Mike, Hess, etc. On the other hand, I feel like I know the plots (or at least the spoilers) of the other two books now and am hesitant to read them now. Compare this to Robert Crais - with brief nods to most prior books and no giveaways - and I find Mr Parker's style too informative.
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LibraryThing member kaylol
It is not bad but for some reason it bored me. The last few pages were really good though.
LibraryThing member SLuce
OK but would not recommend
LibraryThing member jsharpmd
Third book with Detective Merci Rayborn. Lots of action, Wish they were more books with her. T. Jefferson Parker great story teller.
LibraryThing member susandennis
Young cop, Archie Wildcraft and his wife Gwen were the perfect couple and madly in love with one another. When she is shot with his gun and, it appears, he is the victim of a botched suicide attempt, it is all very confusing. This is the third of a series featuring Detective Merci Rayburn. If you
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haven't read any of them, start with the first - The Blue Hour. I am now going back and reading the other two but they clearly should be read in order. I am just delighted to have found a new (to me) author. Parker knows how to tell a story and I can't wait to read the rest of his.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

338 p.; 24 cm

ISBN

078686804X / 9780786868049
Page: 0.2777 seconds