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The Last Goodbye

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From the hot new suspense writer critics predict will have Grisham fans "switching their allegiance in midstream" comes a thrilling tale of love and murder set on the mean streets and in the sleek society haunts of Atlanta. . . .

Sleeping with a client's gorgeous girlfriend may have been the gutsiest move in Jack Hammond's formerly booming law career, but it wasn't the smartest. Booted from his elite law firm, Jack now scrapes by as a court-appointed attorney, his client list a revolving door of small-time drug offenders and petty thieves.

When his friend -- a computer whiz and former addict who'd brought his life back from the brink -- is found dead in his apartment with a syringe stuck in his arm, Jack knows something is very wrong.

Where the cops see just another overdose, Jack sees a murder. Investigating the case, he learns that his friend was obsessed with a beautiful singer -- who also happens to be half of the most popular power couple in Atlanta.

Talented and privileged, the spellbinding Michele Sonnieris nevertheless a deeply troubled woman, plagued by secrets. Against his better judgment -- and in a disturbing echo of his earlier fall from grace -- Jack is pulled further and further into her world, where he discovers more suspicious deaths, all pointing toward a mysterious cover-up.

A volatile tale of love, betrayal, and murder shot through with tenderness and poignant humanity, The Last Goodbye is a riveting thriller with a thunderously beating heart, a masterful page-turner that probes the meaning of love and the burdens of the past.

352 pages, Hardcover

First published October 9, 2004

21 people are currently reading
159 people want to read

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Reed Arvin

5 books11 followers

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5 stars
46 (16%)
4 stars
93 (32%)
3 stars
104 (36%)
2 stars
35 (12%)
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9 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 32 reviews
Profile Image for Robert Beveridge.
2,402 reviews198 followers
January 22, 2008
Reed Arvin, The Last Goodbye (Harper, 2004)

Before you read the rest of this review, do yourself a favor. Go to Amazon (if you're not reading it there) and put this book on pre-order. Then come back and finish.

Done? Okay.

The Last Goodbye is Reed Arvin's second novel, so I can't call it the most stunning debut I've read in the last two years (and I've read a bunch of them). And, to be fair, it does have a few minor faults here and there. But it's still better than most any thriller you've read in the last twelve months.

The story of Jack Hammond is so full of plot twists and turns that even explaining the first twenty pages would cause spoileritis (in other words, don't read any reviews but this one, or you'll lose the effect of the end of chapter one). Suffice to say that Jack Hammond is a lawyer whose buddy ends up dead. He wants to find out why. "Why" involves an internationally famous opera singer, a clinical trial of a new hepatitis-C drug, one of the most powerful lawyers in Atlanta, the main drug runner in Atlanta's biggest section of projects, computer hackers, and a whole cast of various freaks, outcasts, degenerates, and other generally fun human beings.

What kept going through my mind as I was reading this was that this was the return of the hard-boiled detective novel. Let's face it, the hard-boiled detective has gotten kind of, well, cuddly over the last thirty years. And as wonderful as Spenser is, we have to blame him for this. I mean, the guy cooks shrimp scampi in his spare time, when he's not getting beaten by thugs. Jack Hammond is no Spenser. He has more in common with Mike Hammer (and while that may not sound like a compliment, it is). The shysters talk fast, the dames are beautiful, the mugs get beat, the bullets fly, the mystery is solved only to find two more mysteries beneath. But layered over all that is the one thing it's impossible to write a book about Atlanta in the twenty-first century without addressing: race. So in actuality, The Last Goodbye is what might have happened if the new, improved hardboiled detective had taken a left at Robert Parker instead of a right.

The conclusion is obvious. And while two novels into a career is not a time to stand up and proclaim Reed Arvin as the next Robert Parker, or even the next Spillane, he's got the goods, he's got the mindset, he's got the potential. Read this book. ****
Profile Image for Jerry B.
1,486 reviews149 followers
July 6, 2010
Cross Grisham & Palmer to get this legal/medical thriller !!

A friend recommended we try Nashville musician/producer turned writer, Reed Arvin -- and what great fun was in store! His bestseller, "The Will", wasn't handy so we tried this, his second outing, and now see what the acclaim is all about. A gripping story, with both legal and medical suspense (much of the book reminded us of the fine plots of Michael Palmer), found us turning pages to find out who did what and who will win in the end!

The storyline is a bit complex to summarize, but the gist of it is that struggling young lawyer Jack Hammond, after a brilliant start with a big wealthy law firm, now runs his own one-man shop after woman trouble. He toils as a public defender, groveling for what few cases get sent his way, mostly guilty parties needing plea bargaining or just sense talked into them as they take the stand for drugs, theft, assault, etc. When good friend Doug Townsend is killed ostensibly by an overdose, Jack goes hunting for the real story -- and is soon immersed in the life of Black opera star Michele Sonnier and her millionaire husband who is about to IPO his successful drug company. Apparently not learning from experience, Jack beds Sonnier en route to discovering some ugly intentions of her husband amid the subsidized housing tenements of the "Glen" and its thug overlords. The suspense comes from Jack's juggling the hunt for the real truth with his affair with Michele and his desire to stop her husband's scary plans. A bittersweet ending ties up everything nicely, but not before we're kept up late sweating out all the paths this one might entwine.

Arvin seems to have the formula for winning writing -- characters we tend to care about, a complex plot pitting good vs. evil in a manner that builds intense suspense, and enough cogent social commentary to add a dollop of provocative intellectualism to his mix of entertaining story telling! Wow! Can't wait to find a copy of his other novel!
438 reviews47 followers
April 27, 2020

“L’AMORE NON PREVALE SEMPRE” (i Capuletti e i Montecchi van Bellini)

Door Corona zijn de bibs natuurlijk gesloten en nu mijn tablet ook de geest gaf, ben ik, aangewezen op een doos met ooit gekregen tweedehands boeken. Ik kende deze schrijver niet, gelukkig bleek het een goeie gok te zijn en ik was dan ook aangenaam verrast.
Jack Hammond, een advocaat uit Atlanta die aan lager wal raakte door een beoordelingsfout, krijgt te horen dat zijn beste vriend stierf aan een geïnjecteerde overdosis fentanyl. Hij kan dat absoluut niet begrijpen want Doug was al een hele tijd clean, had een hekel aan spuiten en was ooit verslaafd aan speed maar zeker niet aan opiaten. Er klopt iets niet volgens hem, maar voor de politie is het een uitgemaakte, gesloten zaak. Als Jack Doug’ s spullen ophaalt, ontdekt hij dat die een ware obsessie had met operadiva Michelle (de echtgenote van een zeer rijke, bekende, filantropische zakenman in de medische branche). Daarenboven was Doug ook nog eens een zeer vooraanstaande hacker. Dan blijkt ook nog dat Doug en Michelle elkaar wel degelijk kenden, ook Jack ontkomt niet aan haar charme. Als ze hem haar levensverhaal vertelt, kan hij niet anders dan haar te helpen met het zoeken naar haar dochter.
Jack, het hoofdpersonage is een fatsoenlijke vent die ooit een verkeerde keuze maakte. Hij is gedesillusioneerd in zijn werk als advocaat die meestal een schikking maakt voor z’n cliënten uit het getto.
De auteur heeft het vaak over de stad Atlanta en de poëtische ouderwetse ziel van het Zuiden. Niet echt relevant voor mijzelf, maar het biedt wel een achtergrond voor het verhaal dat de grote verschillen tussen de rijke elite en degenen die in de achterbuurten moeten leven, stevig in de verf te zet. Er is ook een liefdesverhaal in verwerkt, maar die lopen niet altijd even goed af. Sommige zaken zijn een beetje onrealistisch, namelijk dat de slechten het uiteindelijk toch niet winnen. Maar de machinaties van machtige farma bedrijven zullen de werkelijkheid geen geweld aan doen.
Al bij al is het een spannend, meeslepend verhaal.

Profile Image for LLA.
58 reviews
January 18, 2023
Ik had nog nooit van de schrijver gehoord en vreesde dat het een langdradig boek ging worden omdat het geschreven is vanuit 1 perspectief: dat van de advocaat Jack Hammond. Maar niets is minder waar. Ik hield, naast het spannende verhaal met toch een ietwat verrassend einde, vooral van de zinsconstructies en de manier wordt de menselijke twisten weergeven werden. Op een vreemde manier kon ik meegaan in zijn kronkels.
Profile Image for Aaron  Polish.
298 reviews16 followers
September 5, 2017
very good but sad at the end book, a few mistakes by Reed but was overlooked by his style of writing, the way the description was made fit in perfectly, its readable.
957 reviews12 followers
December 12, 2017
Good main character, good supporting cast, but too many twists and stuff left untied.
Profile Image for Sarah.
1,227 reviews32 followers
January 7, 2018
I really enjoyed this. The "hero" of the book was very likable, but human, and the mystery kept me reading.
Profile Image for Laura Horton.
6 reviews1 follower
April 2, 2018
Although a good story, the pace was a bit slow in unnecessary character development. The last 50 pages helped to secure another “3-Star” rating.
36 reviews3 followers
January 6, 2022
Way too predictable and typical of a lawyer turned writer.
Profile Image for Kimberly ross.
26 reviews1 follower
July 9, 2023
❤️❤️ Amazing book! Kept me on my toes! And I loved the unexpected twists 😁
288 reviews1 follower
October 11, 2025
I liked this book. Reed Arvin is an excellent writer. The ending became a little contorted, but had several levels of resolution. I will look for more of his books.
Profile Image for Raquel Fitzgerald.
Author 30 books8 followers
May 29, 2016
Well, I did reread this book again in March of this year and it is truly fantastic. Mr. Arvin is so eloquent in his writing style that you can almost feel as though you are there in the story as an invisible witness. No surprise that he's a musician.

That said, this story is like Film Noir, sad and with a tragic ending. The only criticism I have is: why must this Anglo (white) man make all of his femme fatals ethnic? First casualty is Hispanic with a husband who beats her to death, then the second is African American who gets killed by her past acquaintances.

I know that it's unfortunate that there is so much racism in the United States. Frankly, that is just the way it is and it has gotten worse in the last 15 or 20 years. Being Mexican American myself, I wonder why they must make so many villains of my culture? I have read many books recently that make us seem like we are unfit as human beings. So, one more just sucks.

I hope that one day they make this into a movie because Film Noir is one of my favorite genres. But perhaps we could change the color of the femme fatals.
Profile Image for Wendy.
1,098 reviews30 followers
December 22, 2014
I was one of 20 people chosen to preview The Last Goodbye for Bookreporter.com. I was thrilled with the opportunity, even though I was unsure this would be a book I would have chosen for myself. I like mysteries, suspense, and thrillers, but would I enjoy this particular one? I hesitate to use the word slow to describe this book because the word has a negative connotation to it. Sometimes slowness in a book is appropriate and it is tied into the style of writing used. That was the case in this book. Reed Arvin has a magical way with words. His style reminded me of the old black and white movies; although I am not sure I can put my finger on why that is exactly. Mr. Arvin’s story was complex in many respects; not only was this a book about a defense attorney investigating the murder of an old friend, this is also a story about love, ethics, and race and class divisions. The characters seemed human and real.
Profile Image for Laura Brown.
296 reviews10 followers
September 5, 2008
I'm a sucker for a detective novel set in my home town of Atlanta, GA.  The story was enjoyable enough; an easy read. It made me think of the old detective stories of years ago. It was somewhat "gritty" as advertised. The characters however, were fairly one dimensional and could have easily been written into any Janet Evanovich novel. The story could have been set in any city, so the city itself really didn't matter. I was irritated that the author misnamed several well known metro Atlanta locations. The most glaring error to my mind was calling "Sandy Springs" "Sandy Spring."  I understand that it is just an "s," but please!
Profile Image for Joy.
361 reviews
March 11, 2012
Investigating the mystery of a friend's death, a a down-on-his-luck attorney gets mixed up with a gorgeous opera singer with a secret past--a dangerous involvement that pulls him into the worlds of high-tech biological research, big business, and high society. I recently reread this as I couldn't remember what it was about. It is not worth it. The lawyer is trying to solve the reason why his college roommate ended up dead even though he had a history of drug abuse. At the end the opera singer has to die trying to protect her daughter from a drug dealer but the lawyer is charged with her future care on her death bed.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Cathie.
232 reviews
May 24, 2009
Enjoyed this book more than I thought I would. Odd characters, unusual situations, characters you like and are not cookie cutter perfect. Would defintely read more by this author. I love the review of this book by Margaret Maron. It sums it up perfectly: "...a heartbreaking love song to modern Atlanta-its tragedies, its promises, its failures, its dreams. 'The Last Goodbye' is magnolias and humidity, yet it's also crime and redemption. I've never met Reed Arvin, but I'd be proud to claim him as kin."
Profile Image for Rena Searles.
203 reviews5 followers
June 8, 2015
Loved this book! Jack Hammond is a talented lawyer who has fallen from grace. In the course of helping a client he stumbles into another world of opera, deadly intrigue & romance. Kept me on the edge of my seat. A thoroughly satisfying read.....
Profile Image for Maggie Clark.
Author 2 books5 followers
June 15, 2019
Great book.!

This author kept adding depth as the story developed. I was interested in all the characters. None were two - dimensional. Unexpected twists kept me turning the pages. I thoroughly enjoyed the book
Profile Image for Jennifer.
98 reviews1 follower
July 16, 2009
Decent book, nothing to write home about though
Profile Image for Nancie.
Author 2 books2 followers
August 20, 2012
Started out strong, great sense of place, but slipped off the rails about two-thirds the way in. Maybe too many characters, maybe a loss of focus.
Profile Image for Laura McKenna.
55 reviews19 followers
May 3, 2013
Interesting... With a neat little section on how antibiotics work.
Profile Image for Joanna.
50 reviews6 followers
December 2, 2015
The book is quite interesting.
There is a mystery, something happens, there is murder - even more than one - the story and fate of characters arouse curiosity.
Profile Image for Rubberboots.
266 reviews2 followers
March 29, 2016
Terrible book - skimmed about a quarter of it. Even though I read it to the end (I did want to know the ending), this is the type of book I will forget in a few months. Implausible plot.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 32 reviews

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