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The Fallen

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A good cop, a young man of conscience, Robbie Brownlaw was thrown from a sixth-floor window of a downtown hotel and miraculously survived the fall. The traumatic incident left Robbie with a fast-track career in the San Diego P.D.’s Homicide division . . . and a rare neurological condition that enables him to see people’s emotional words as colored shapes—green trapezoids of envy, red squares of deception . . . Another good man lies dead in a blood-splattered Ford Explorer—an ex-cop-turned-ethics investigator whose private life was torn open by unthinkable tragedy. Whether Garrett Asplundh’s death was suicide or murder isn’t immediately apparent—but it’s soon clear to Robbie and his smart, tough partner, McKenzie Cortez, that Garrett had hard evidence of sex, scandal, and corruption spreading deep into local government. But pursuing the truth could prove more emotionally devastating than Robbie ever imagined—and cause the fatal fall of more than one top player, and the city Robbie serves.

464 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 2006

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About the author

T. Jefferson Parker

99 books852 followers
T. Jefferson Parker is the bestselling author of 26 crime novels, including Edgar Award-winners SILENT JOE and CALIFORNIA GIRL. Parker's next work is coming-of-age thriller, A THOUSAND STEPS, set for January of 2022. He lives with his family in a small town in north San Diego County, and enjoys fishing, hiking and beachcombing.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 184 reviews
1,711 reviews88 followers
August 13, 2016
RATING: 4.5
PROTAGONIST:
SETTING: California
SERIES: Standalone

Robbie Brownlaw is a homicide detective in San Diego, California. One day, he is eating a meal when he sees that a hotel across the street has caught fire. He dashes over to help out, rescuing several people. However, the last person he tries to help turns on him and throws him out of a hotel window, six floors up. Against all odds, Robbie survives. The main after-effect is that he now has synesthesia, a neurological condition where your senses get mixed up. Sometimes when people talk to him, he sees their voices as colored shapes. For examples, when someone is lying he sees red squares come out of their mouth, black triangles equal dread, and so on. As you can imagine, seeing the feelings that people are trying to mask when he interrogates them turns out to be a very useful tool, indeed.

The main case that Brownlaw is working on is the murder of one of the members of the Ethics Authority, a man of great integrity by the name of Garrett Asplundh. He is the kind of man who can't be bought, who is the proverbial straight arrow. Given his job, which is the equivalent of Internal Affairs but for the city government, he has many enemies. Robbie feels that he must have been on the verge of uncovering something very big which threatened someone badly. The suspense ratchets up as Brownlaw and his audacious partner, McKenzie Cortez, become entangled in schemes, political maneuvering and vice operations.

Fortunately, Parker doesn't over rely on the synethesia device and the investigation succeeds more from the hard work of the detectives than from anything that Robbie sees as he speaks to people. It's an added dimension to a very likeable character and very plausible. What's interesting with this character is that he's very sensitive in some ways, and incredibly oblivious in others, particularly to the feelings of his wife, Gina. I liked him a lot.

If I were to meet T. Jefferson Parker and tell him how much I liked the book, he would see pale blue ovals coming from my mouth, meaning sincerity. THE FALLEN is a compelling police procedural with a nicely complex plot and a very likeable protagonist. The synethesia element is a little added something that makes the book stand out; but even without that, this book is well worth reading.



POST REVIEW NOTE:
From an article on synethesia (http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler... "Imagine that when you see a city's skyline, you taste blackberries. Or maybe when you hear a violin, you feel a tickle on your left knee. Perhaps you are completely convinced that Wednesdays are light red. If you have experiences like these, you might have synesthesia."

Profile Image for Cathy DuPont.
456 reviews175 followers
July 13, 2012
My local reading friend and I both love mysteries so we were talking about writers who won or were nominated for the yearly Edgars. From there we went on a venture to find and read as many authors as possible in that category. T. Jefferson Parker was Sandy’s find and she was bragging about him from the first book.

I was reading Michael Connelly and figured he couldn’t be as good as she felt he was because I had never heard of him. Wrong once again.

Great book, great characters and great plot all wrapped up into this nice package.

Detective Robbie Brownlaw was thrown from a six story building while trying to save an occupant who happened to be a little drunk and a lot suicidal. Robbie survives but is left with synesthesia, a neurological condition where your senses get ‘mixed up.’ His form of synesthesia is his ability to see colored forms from the mouths of people when they are talking so that he ‘sees’ their real emotion regardless of what they say. This gives him the ability to hear what people are saying and determine at the same time their real emotion. For example, a lie or deception would have red squares floating from their mouth, so Robbie knows the person is lying. Robbie sees all other human emotions such as sympathy, anger, apathy, happiness, violence or envy all with different shapes and colors. Envy is indeed the color green.

This ability assists Robbie as a detective with the San Diego Police Department however no one knows of his ability except his adored wife, Gina. He’s kept his ability to himself in part because he feels the SDPD would not allow him to continue in his career and others, of course, would think he was crazy or odd. They do already because he survived the six story fall.

A fellow officer of a separate ethics law enforcement agency commits suicide while investigating ethics violations in city government and it is quickly determined to be a murder.

Robbie and his partner Detective Mackenzie Cortez are assigned to the investigation which leads them to unravel what the ethics officer discovered. Two personal matters interfere with the investigation, both Robbie’s personal life with his wife Gina and the personal life of the ethics detective.

This was one of those books I did not want to put down. You’ve read them. I hated it when at night I would fall asleep reading because I would have read until the wee hours of the morning.

Looking back at the Jeff Parker books I’ve read, I gave two three stars and two, including this one, four stars. Damn good track record for an author I didn’t know and wasn’t even interested in reading. This one deserved all four stars and perhaps five if I wasn’t so stingy with those five stars.

998 reviews13 followers
May 18, 2017
I really liked this book, glad I picked it up from a friend. Good characterizations, a likable hero. Well-written, and I wasn't sure of the killer until the end. A dark story of corruption and self-importance among the powerful in San Diego, and also of love and loss. I found it hard to put down.
149 reviews3 followers
August 19, 2017
Very unusual book by having the detective suffer from synesthesia - it's a neurological condition that mixes up your senses. In his case, he can see a person's emotions by the 'colors' and 'shapes' of words when people are talking. Not only was the mystery interesting, I found myself intently searching for the next mention of a red square, or a yellow trapezoid. Loved the twist with this!!
1,251 reviews23 followers
June 19, 2012
I wonder if Mr. Parker leads a really sad and depressed life. Most successful writers will say that an aspiring writer should write what he knows. Judging by most of the offerings by Parker that I've read, he must really know depression.

The hero of this story is Robbie, a detective who has been promoted early, primarily because of a highly publicized incident in which he was thrown out of a tall building and lived to tell about it. Since the accident, Robbie has developed an extra-sensory gift\curse that causes him to see emotions as people speak in the form of colored geometric shapes. This makes it easy to tell when people are lying, embarrassed, or becoming aggressive. While I thought that the author was kidding with this angle, a search of the internet showed that indeed there is such a condition where sounds and sights stimulate other senses, etc. On the surface, Robbie is "the Fallen," by this I mean he is the title character.

Garrett is the public ethics investigator with dirt on just about everybody in the city of San Diego. He is also, "The Fallen", in that his life has fallen apart since the loss of his three year old daughter in a drowning accident. He is the murder victim, shot in his car on the side of a local road.

Robbie runs into a number of other "Fallen" folks, though. Obviously his investigation causes him to delve into what exactly Garrett was investigating and he uncovers a hotbed of corruption, sex scandal, and a prostitution ring. He runs into fallen women, fallen artists, fallen musicians, fallen politicians, fallen police officers. Just about everyone in this book can in one way or another be conmsidered "Fallen."

And that's the sad thing. In the middle of his investigation, Robbie's belove wife packs up and leaves him and he stumbles through the pain and suffering of that break up. He hurts and beats himself up and tries to win his wife back. As he does this he continues to investigate Garrett, only to discover that Garrett was also trying to win his wife back.

Two thirds of my way through the book I thought I had figured out the identity of the murderer. I'm not normally good at this, and felt cheated. Then, I discovered I was wrong.. WAY wrong.. (okay, sort of close, but not close enough to win a cigar or a kewpie doll)...Parker succeeded in dropping all the clues in front of my, but like a deft magician, got me looking at the wrong place, while missing the RIGHT clues that were there for the RIGHT Killer.

Parker wraps up the conclusion of the novel well. What I mean is that in a couple of pages he is able to summarize the aftermath of the investigation in an interesting manner and then move on to examining a possible future for Robbie. The wrap up was very well done.

While I enjoyed this book a lot, I only gave it three stars because it was so moody and depressing. I'm certain that was Parker's intent. I mean we see Garrett's deep, dark, pain and self-destructive behavior and the reader is invited to experience the sense of loss of that beloved daughter. We see how it affected Garrett and is touching Robbie emotionally as well. It is a well-written emotional book with some heart wrenching horrifying revelations toward the end. Overall, though, it was a bit too dark and too depressing to me. It just lowered my enjoyment slightly,. though it may not affect other readers in the same way.
Profile Image for Martha .
167 reviews43 followers
March 24, 2012
This was the 1st free book I found on my new "ibooks" app for my phone. Because it was free, I was apprehensive as to whether it would be a good read. As it turned out, I really enjoyed it, and am looking up more of T. Jefferson Parker's books.

There were many characters, but they were developed enough to follow as the plot progressed. The story takes place in beautiful San Diego, California. (And, beautiful Sacramento was mentioned once in the book -- go Kings!) The main character, Robbie Brownlaw, a Homicide detective for the city of San Diego, is thrown from the sixth floor of the Las Palmas Hotel, and survives the fall without major injuries. However, Robbie develops a neurological condition called synaesthesia, due to the fall. For Robbie, he sees colors from a person's emotions when he/she speaks. He can detect envy, happiness, and deception. This aspect makes it very interesting throughout the story.

Robbie is very much in love with his wife, Gina. He describes many instances of their lives together throughout the book. She seems to have a different view of their relationship, though, and leaves Robbie, without any explanation. To be honest, this is the only part of the book that disappointed me. I guess because it's a fictional story, (and she was very cruel on her method of leaving) my cold-hearted side said, "Ok, Robbie, move on, get on with your life". So, when he would start thinking of her and trying to reconcile with her (which in real life is completely natural), I got irritated and wanted the story to move on to the investigation of Garrett's death.

The suspicious death of an investigator for the San Diego Ethics Authority Enforcement Unit, Garrett Asplundh, begins the story. He was a "watch-dog" for corrupt city administrators, politicians, and businessmen and women. Corruption was rampant. In this story, there is a prostitution ring with "high-class" hookers and "high-class" Johns. Is that a dichotomy? Before Garrett's death, he'd had video taken of politicians, police officers, and others in compromising positions with the above-mentioned women. Robbie and his partner, McKenzie Cortez, interview numerous individuals who all have good reason to see Garrett dead.

T. Jefferson Parker makes you feel as if you are right next to Robbie throughout the book, hearing his thoughts, feeling his worries and sad emotions. Robbie was truly a good cop and a good guy too. He was unpretentious and non-materialistic. His descriptions about his own car and clothing of others, several times throughout the book, gave that away. I kind of developed a crush on this perfect guy. Is that possible to have a crush on a fictional character? I was sad to finish the book. I felt like I lost a friend. I definitely recommend this book as a goodread!
Profile Image for Linda.
1,319 reviews52 followers
November 20, 2010
Robbie Brownlaw is high on life, working at the job he's always wanted and married to the girl of his dreams. He's about to learn one of life's most important lessons, however; everything can change in the blink of an eye. Brownlaw is one of the most interesting fictional detectives on my reading list. As The Fallen opens, he's literally taking a fall, from the 6th story of a burning San Diego hotel. He survives, but develops synesthesia. In his case, Robbie can see colors representative of the speaker's emotion while he's conversing with them. That unsettling conditions comes in handy when he questions witnesses, but it sure doesn't make his personal relationships easy to maintain. Imagine knowing instantly that someone is lying to you, or jealous.

Robbie's been back on the job for a few months, when an officer from the city's ethics commission is brutally murdered. His investigation takes him into the seamy underside of San Diego, a city that's so beautiful on the surface. As he proceeds with his inquiries, Brownlaw encounters high priced call girls, cops on the take, corrupt city officials, and the victim's wife, who has now lost both her little daughter and her husband within the space of nine months. In the midst of the turmoil, Robbie's own wife deserts him, leaving him stunned and heartbroken.


Intriguing, fully developed characters, suspenseful and dramatic plot, and well-honed prose combine to make The Fallen a high quality page turner. Now I'm off to check out Parker's other books.
Profile Image for Lukasz Pruski.
973 reviews141 followers
September 9, 2018
"Although we call ourselves America's Finest City, there is a long tradition of collusion and corruption here in San Diego. Some of it once reached high enough to taint American presidency - Richard Nixon's. Some of it is low and squalid and oddly funny - a mayor in bed with a swindler, councilmen taking bribes from strip-club owners [...]"

I have been a San Diegan since January 1983 so I love reading books that convey the locales, moods, and feel of this beautiful city. T. Jefferson Parker's The Fallen (2006) does that very well. This is a re-read: I am coming back to the novel after about 11 years and liking it a little less than I had then, but I still think it is an outstanding police procedural with a touch of psychological crime drama.

The set-up is outstanding. During a hotel fire Detective Brownlaw attempts to save people trapped in their rooms but a man whom he tries to help throws him out of the hotel window. Thanks to falling on an awning over the hotel entrance Brownlaw survives, just barely, and after a long rehabilitation returns to work. The accident causes him to acquire synesthesia, a neurological condition that produces responses in a different sensory path than the one from which the stimuli come. He sees people voices as colored shapes.

The body of an Internal Affairs cop, who has recently been working for the Ethics Authority Enforcement unit, is found in his car near Cabrillo Bridge in Balboa Park. The cop has been shot at close range. Det. Brownlaw and his partner, McKenzie Cortez, are assigned the case. Virtually each step forward they make in their inquiry widens the scope of the investigation. For instance, the detectives discover a high-class prostitution ring whose clients include top officials from the city government and police force.

The author convincingly shows the deadly embrace between money and government. Elected politicians, city bureaucrats, commissioners, police captains and other notables are involved in elaborate and interlocking schemes of corruption that bring them money, power, and sex with beautiful young women. The corruption schemes increase their chances to win congressional or state assembly or senate seats that will allow them to get even more money, power and sex. Obviously, corruption is the engine that makes world go 'round and occurs whereever people lust for money, power, and sex - meaning everywhere. In this novel the corruption schemes involve underfunding city employees pension fund and tinkering with municipal bond ratings - this is clearly based on factual material; I remember reading about such schemes in the local paper.

The procedural thread in the novel is first-rate but the characterizations of the protagonists - the "good guys," meaning the detectives - lack strength, though. Particularly the portrayal of Det. Cortez is paper-thin and does not read as a real person; the entire thread of her affair with a hi-tech entrepreneur lacks plausibility.

When I read the novel 11 years ago I liked the synesthesia thread. Not any more. I mean synesthesia is obviously a real and fascinating phenomenon (for instance, Nabokov writes about it in Speak, Memory, see the review ), but here the author uses it as a cheap literary device - a lie detector. Uh-oh. Not good.
"The red squares of deception rushed out of him. They were bigger than most I'd seen, and their sides were slightly dipped, concave, [...]"
In 2006 I would have rated the novel with over four stars. Now it is just

Three-and-three-quarter stars.
1,226 reviews3 followers
November 4, 2017
Interesting. Nothing outstanding however.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Anna McNamara.
6 reviews1 follower
December 2, 2024
I pulled this out of a Little Free Library during a reading slump and this was just the thing to snap me out of it-an easy read with enough suspense to keep me engaged
530 reviews
January 7, 2010
This was okay.

I have really enjoyed Parker's earlier books Pacific Beat Laguna Heat but some of his more recent books have been somewhat disappointing this and Storm Runners both feel like they were written more quickly or without the same level of attention.

The characters here are decent, but I felt that they could have been more developed, I would have liked to have seen more dialogue to see how the characters interacted, rather than being told by the narrator, which would have been interesting if the narration had been infused with more personality.


The plot was interesting and the ending was an sort of an interesting twist, except that it kind of came out of no where and not all of the killer's actions were really explained.
Profile Image for Marleen.
1,867 reviews90 followers
July 10, 2014
Being a fan of police procedurals, I’ve been recommended to dive into the work of Jefferson T. Parker. So far I’ve enjoyed Silent Joe and California Girl, and some of the Charlie Hood series. I have conflicting impressions about The Fallen. I adored the compelling characterization of Robbie Brownlaw and that’s why I’m giving this book a 3-star rating, but I didn’t enjoy the storyline, nor the plot.
Overall this book depressed me a bit and I couldn’t wait to finish it. Don’t get me wrong, giving us a peek at the darker side of humanity is what makes this author work for me, but when the plot is equally disappointing, it’s hard to get excited.
On the other hand, learning about synesthesia was certainly a plus point. Synesthesia is a very unique neurologic phenomenon. The affliction made it possible for Robbie Brownlaw to read people and detect their “true colors” accurately. It came in handy in his job as an investigator, but in his personal life, I think he might have preferred not to have that gift.
Profile Image for Plum-crazy.
2,467 reviews42 followers
October 22, 2017
The cover blurb of this book had me intrigued;
"There was nothing special about San Diego detective Robbie Brownlow, until he plunged six storeys from a burning hotel. He was left with broken bones, a large scar, and synesthesia - a condition where words take on shapes and colours that indicate the speaker's emotions. "

.....but I'm sorry to say it's not lived up to expectations. For me, the Synethesia angle was really underplayed. While I didn't want chapter & verse on what colours & shapes Robbie was seeing in every conversation, a little more than "he saw the orange squares of deceit" would have been nice - how about his thoughts on what he'd seen? Surely as a detective he should be using this internal lie detector! All the references to Robbie's "talent" could be removed & it wouldn't make a difference to the tale....a reasonable story but for me it didn't fulfil it's potential.

Profile Image for Wendy.
Author 8 books16 followers
May 11, 2012
It took me a bit longer to truly get into the story than I thought I would but ultimately it was a satisfying read. I liked the main character, the pacing was lively, and the mystery kept me interested. I picked it up because I'm fascinated with the mystery sub-genre involving detectives with synesthesia. On one hand, I like how Parker manages to incorporate the condition, making it a part of the character's life, instead of the primary thing that defines him. On the other, I wanted more of it. That shouldn't reflect poorly on the novel; it is just what I had hoped for. There is some excellent writing in this book--a few moments and phrases that come together perfectly. I think it was worth my time.
Profile Image for Bill.
677 reviews18 followers
May 29, 2012
Fairly pleasant police procedural set in San Diego, California. The twist of having the protagonist detective be affected with the psychological disorder of being able to see the emotions behind people's words was oddly dispensible. Such an interesting quirk could have been much more integral to the plot.

Otherwise, the writing was top-notch. Characters were distinct and well developed (except several of upper-level cops that sort of mushed together). Settings were sometimes nicely done, other times irrelevent. The plot kept me guessing until the very end, along with the detectives.
Profile Image for Kathy.
1,007 reviews7 followers
December 19, 2013
I like to read books by local authors. According to my goodreads pages I read my first Parker book 6 years ago and also gave it 2 stars. So I don't think I'll read anymore. The author lives half an hour north of me and writes about the city an hour south of me. I don't spend much time in the city and was disappointed that I could only picture one of his landmarks. I liked the homicide detective protagonist and his female partner, and wanted them to find the murderer with a minimum of pain and for him to reunite with his wife, but we don't always get the ending we want.
Profile Image for Beth.
653 reviews13 followers
June 11, 2009
I enjoyed silent joe so much I decided to read more by the same author. This one was not quite as good, but still entertaining. Detective is thrown from 5 stories up and when he recovers he synsythese (forgive the spelling). Still haven't had time to check if this is a real condition. When people speak he sees colored shapes coming from their mouth and certain colors mean they're being untruthful or mean or innocent.He's investigating who called an Ethics Investigator.
Profile Image for Frank McGirk.
868 reviews6 followers
April 24, 2011
Very enjoyable read. Has a nice gimmick of having the detective have a form of synethesia where he can see colors and shapes when people talk. The shapes correlate to emotions, and more importantly for a detective...lies. He doesn't overuse the gimmick either, so it just nicely adds some info for the reader without giving up the game too quickly.

I'd definitely read another by him when in the mood for something light.
Profile Image for Skip.
3,845 reviews585 followers
September 28, 2009
Once again, Parker plumbs the seedy world of Southern California politics and corruption in the context of the execution of an ex-cop, ethics investigator, who appears to have been murdered for what he has uncovered in respect of a local prostitution ring. The detective uses the case to help resolve his own inner demons (synethesia) and abandonment by the wife he adores.
Profile Image for PaulC.
42 reviews1 follower
August 16, 2018
3.5 / 5 stars. My second book by this author. The audio version for both books. Slow moving, good ending very light on action. Kind of wanders and quite a few characters to keep track of. Worth reading but no as good as The Famous and the Dead. Will still be reading more books by this author and was still glad that I read this book.
Profile Image for Chuck.
530 reviews10 followers
January 24, 2018
Another terrific story by T. Jefferson Park. Wonder if a series will continue with Detectives Robbie Brownlaw and McKenzie Cortez . . . Hoping so!
619 reviews2 followers
July 13, 2018
Suspense and entertainment with depth and style, Parker has penned another winner! Captivating plot, fully human characters, all against the authentically reproduced background of San Diego, America's Finest City. Parker, however, through his main characters, peels back the city's layers to reveal something far from "fine" in the city's leadership, as he travels the twisting trail to solving a baffling mystery.

This is not your average whodunit, it has a totally readable style, a wide range of life's characters and a title embodied in the novel. Detective Robbie Brownlaw, the main character, was quite literally "fallen" after being thrown from a sixth story hotel window. He rises to a new day with the added "gift" of synethesia, a neurological condition that allows him to "see" the words of a speaker, more specifically the emotions of the speaker presented as colored shapes. Using this tool in his role as a police detective, he encounters another fallen person, a city employee treading near dangerous secrets, who is felled by an assassin's bullet. The book ends with a dramatic fall by the murderer but not before the story has treated us to many ups and downs. Failed marriages, exploits and indictments of key sex scandal participants, countered by fresh starts by some characters.

All together a highly interesting, well executed mystery novel that is most definitely worth reading.
Profile Image for Patrick Hayes.
684 reviews7 followers
March 8, 2021
This was my first read of a book by Parker and I don't know if I would return for more.

Police officer Robbie Brownlaw was thrown from a six-story building three years ago and survived, though now he can see shapes and colors when people speak, giving him the ability to be a human lie detector. Ethics Investigator was found shot dead in his car, and Brownlaw, now a detective, investigates.

Having Brownlaw have synethesia is an odd tic and one I've not heard of. This ability doesn't add much to the story. It could be excluded and nothing lost. It always took me out of the tale when it was dropped during dialogue.

I enjoyed the characters, with Brownlaw being very real, sans tic, and what he is enduring in his personal life is heartbreaking. Equally heartbreaking is the life, which is slowly revealed, of the murder victim.

Where I started to have issues is when it was revealed that practically everyone in a position of power or of wealth was guilty of something. I realize it's done so that everyone looks guilty of the crime, making readers second guess the killer's identity, but I stopped thinking anyone in San Diego was innocent. It did seem like overkill.

The identity of the killer was underwhelming and the climax involving the character was even more so. It seemed as if Parker just wanted to end the novel.

I enjoyed the protagonist and the victim, but no one else gave my anyone to root for.
Profile Image for Frederick Tan.
565 reviews
October 13, 2018
Robbie Brownlaw is a lucky man who survived a fall from six stories high. Now a homicide detective in San Diego PD he has to investigate the death of a former cop Gerrett Asplundh who was employed by the Ethics Authority of San Diego. His job to monitor the city workers for improprieties in their work place. At first it was thought to be a suicide but when it was clear that Garrett was murdered, Robbie along with his partner McKenzie Cortez swing into action.
Somewhere along the line Robbie has to deal with his wife Gina running out on him as his marriage increasingly hit the rock for no reason at all. The storyline is good but the plot is as bland as ever. Even the climax is not a climax as such. The author dealt with the aftermath of Robbie marriage in a more poignant tone. At the ripe old age of 29 life just begin for Robbie. Goodbyes are hard to say. I just hope the author would give Robbie a sequel because this book feel half done.
Profile Image for Sumejja.
1 review
November 6, 2019
This is my first book I've read in English (with more than 100 pages).
I gave it five stars, mainly for the plot. I am not really a fan of books that don't have a lot of dialogues, they are boring to me, and sometimes I also skip parts where there's a lot of describing and etc.
Something like this happend to The Fallen. So for the writing style, I give it 4/5.
Besides that, I loved the plot, I like how detective Robbie's new ability helps them around and the way he finds out which colour and shape are related to which emotions. Also, the way he tries to manage everything that's happening to him and around him.
The plot is twisty, keeping you on your toes, and from me it deserves a 5/5.
Anyways, I've finished the book a few months ago, so I have forgotten a lot of details, but I do remember enjoying it and I couldn't wait for the end and how would have everything been resolved.
So, from me, it's a big recommendation, I hope you guys like it as much as I did.
Profile Image for V.Era.
16 reviews7 followers
November 25, 2024
When you, in all innocence, picked up a book by an author unknown to you because it still looked new and unused (and it only cost $1) at the local thrift store, only to be utterly blown away and could not put it down until you’d turned the last page, then you proceeded to carry it in your heart after you put it down. Sure I wasn’t unprepared for its possible gulpability as the cover clearly warns “TWO-TIME WINNER OF THE EDGAR AWARD FOR BEST NOVEL” all in alarming capitals. I should have known I’ve struck gold. Still, I wasn’t so gullible as to believe a book by its cover. Only it gently held me by my waist from page one like the best kind of lover. It whispered to me of hearts and love and lost while we tried to solve a crime. It invited me to fall in love with the victim and the person trying to solve his death, not forcefully, never by force, but with eyes of observation. At the end, you realized it’s not a book about crime after all. It’s a book about heart. All of it. Five stars.
Profile Image for Judy.
719 reviews2 followers
October 19, 2021
Lots of fallen people in this novel, not just our main character Robbie Brownlaw, who was actually thrown. The characters in this book were well developed and relatable. Everyone had their private side and their public persona. I liked how even though Robbie's life was falling apart with a good friend's murder and his wife leaving him, he had to keep on doing what he does. Parker made it feel like you were part of the investigation where little nuggets of information were added in with no conclusions drawn. I felt a certain someone wasn't looked at closely enough and at one point convinced myself that he dunnit. But alas, Robbie is a better detective than I and discovered the true mastermind. A very real feeling thrilling. Not all the bad guys get what is coming to them, just like what happens in real life.
18 reviews3 followers
July 2, 2017
*Rating: 3.5*
Okay.. I have be honest. I expexted much less from this book. There are many things i would prefer differently, but it was actually a very nice book.
This is what i call "traditional crime story".
A detective, a partner, and a killer to be found. I didn't see any special use of the character's "gift" rather than just being there as a part of his personal story. Every lie told in this book by someone, was already established by the readed before his special gift detected it.
Other than that, it is a pretty touching story and somehow you get connected with it.
Not a lot of humor, but nice.
One more thing about the ending.. well.. it ended too fast. Nothing to keep your nerves on. But when i finished it, i wasn't really dissaponted.
Profile Image for Tom Maseth.
136 reviews1 follower
July 4, 2019
Robbie Brownlaw is a good cop. He was thrown from a sixth-floor window of a downtown hotel and miraculously survived. The traumatic incident left Robbie with a fast-track career in the San Diego P.D.'s Homicide division and a rare neurological condition called synesthesia. Synesthesia is a neurological condition that results in a mixing or blending of the senses; it is a rare condition. In Brownlaw's case, he occasionally sees shapes and colors when people speak and has learned that these shapes and colors can reflect the emotions and intent of the speaker. Robbie and his partner, McKenzie Cortez, begin investigating the case of Garrett Asplundh, shot dead while waiting for a meeting with his estranged wife. Jeff Parker rarely disappoints and this book is another excellent book from him.
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