This was my first introduction to any writing by Dick Wolf, create of TV's successful Law & Order series. I had high hopes therefore going in. But for me this was a mediocre crime thriller. I read crime and thrillers more than any other genre so I know what I love and what I don't, this was a middle of the road novel in my opinion.
What's the book about?
The second page-turning thriller from the creator of Law & Order starring NYPD Special Agent Jeremy Fisk.
Soon after the Mexican presidential election, twenty-three bodies are discovered beheaded on the United States border, each marked with a unique symbol - a carving of a hummingbird. Detective Cecilia Garza of the Mexican intelligence agency recognizes it as the signature of Chuparosa - an assassin feared for his cunning and brutality. The fierce and intense detective has been pursuing the killer for years, yet knows little about him, except that he's heading to New York - with the rest of the world.
It's United Nations Week in Manhattan and Jeremy Fisk can't let grief over a devastating loss keep him from his duty to safeguard the city. Complicating matters is news of a mass murder nearby - and the arrival of the disturbingly beautiful and assertive Cecilia Garza, determined to do things her way.
In the race to catch Chuparosa, these uneasy allies must learn to work together, and fast. As they soon discover, there's more to this threat than meets the eye - and Fisk will have to learn the hard way that justice is not always blind.
My Review:
So essentially we have murders galore going on at the US/Mexico border, executions of rival Cartel members and innocent people alike, the dead bodies are piling up (minus their heads and various other body parts) and Detective Cecilia Garzia knows who she is looking for to pin the blame on. She's after a powerful and dangerous Cartel leader called Chuparosa, known for his drawings of a Hummingbird sometimes on the bodies of his victims. We are talking ruthless Mexican drug cartel stuff.
I had trouble connecting with Garzia as a character, she is known as the "Ice Queen" due to her poker faced ability to be tough, she has to be, she is in a man's world and has to earn the respect of those around her. I wanted her to be more realistic, I wanted to connect and see underneath a bit more, we got glimpses but I was left wanting.
When execution style murders happen on US soil with the signature of Chuparosa all over the bodies, Garzia teams up with NYPD Special Agent Jeremy Fisk to solve the crimes. For a lot of the book they are not gelling together well, approaching things from different angles.
I found Fisk a better character to feel connected with slightly, perhaps reading the first book might have introduced me to his character more in-depth, but again, he kind of escaped me. Didn't stand out as a memorable character at all.
The middle of the book just lost me after it's all-action gruesome starting point and developments. I was just bored, too much emphasis on ongoing conversation, politics and procedures for me. I felt it lacked the flair it needed to keep the book really bouncing along. I like my crime to be gutsy and to hold me through every word. Don't get me wrong, there are good parts in the book too, it just was not consistent for me.
It combines politics with police work, blends together police and special forces from Mexico and the USA, throws together unlikely people into working relationship but do they get their man?
Does The Hummingbird fly free? Is Chuparosa's time up as a violent and dangerous man. And how many headless bodies turn up before they even gets close to him? You have to read the book to find out.
I think fans of this style of crime novel might indeed love this book, as will fans of Dick Wolf's previous novels. It's not bad, but it's not going to stick in my memory.
I received a copy of this book thanks to the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.