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Midnight come again por Dana Stabenow
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Midnight come again (edição 2000)

por Dana Stabenow

Séries: Kate Shugak (10)

MembrosCríticasPopularidadeAvaliação médiaMenções
530746,115 (3.99)10
Fiction. Mystery. Romance. Thriller. HTML:Book 10: A Kate Shugak Novel
Edgar Award winner Dana Stabenow has written numerous atmospheric crime novels featuring the very prickly, very human Kate Shugak, but her novels also have a scene-stealing costar: Alaska, unforgiving, breathtaking, dangerous, and beautiful. Stabenow's evocation of this wilderness, combined with her talent for bringing characters to life and creating knuckle-whitening suspense, has made her "one of the strongest voices in crime fiction." (Seattle Times).
Now in Midnight Come Again, all these elements come together for Stabenow's most compelling Kate Shugak novel to date.
Kate, a former investigator for the Anchorage D.A. and now a P.I. for hire, is missing after a winter spent in mourning. Alaska State Trooper Jim Chopin, Kate's best friend, needs her to help him work a new case. He discovers her hiding out in Bering, a small fishing village on Alaska's western coast, living and working under an assumed nameâ?? working hard, as eighteen-hour workdays seem to be her only justification for getting up in the morning. But before they can even discuss Kate's last several months, or what Jim is doing looking for her in Bering, they're up to their eyes in Jim's case, which is suddenly more complicatedâ?? and more dangerousâ?? than they suspected.
A magnificent crime novel about life in America's last wilderness, the heart-wrenching grief that goes with love, and murder, Midnight Come Again is Dana Stabenow's best novel
… (mais)
Membro:wvanderl
Título:Midnight come again
Autores:Dana Stabenow
Informação:New York : St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2001, c2000.
Coleções:AudioBook
Avaliação:
Etiquetas:to-read

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Midnight Come Again por Dana Stabenow

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Still reeling from the loss of her longtime boyfriend, Kate is working crazy hours at a charter air business in Bering. Trooper Jim Chopin is sent there to determine if nuclear material is bring smuggled into the U.S. and he and Kate hook up to solve the case, with both having close brushes with death along the way. Kate also discovers her grandmother kept personal secrets in Bering. ( )
  skipstern | Jul 11, 2021 |
"Midnight Come Again" opens like a Tom Clancy novel with a rogue Russian military unit killing people in an armed robbery in Moscow.

It was well written and intriguing but it left me with one big question: where is Kate Shugak?

I'm fairly sure this is the reaction that Dana Stabenow expected me to have as this is the question the whole novel sets out to answer.

The events in most of this novel are not seen from Kate's point of view but from Jim Chopin's. Jim has been asking around the Park to see if anyone knows where Kate is. No-one has any information for him but they all expect him to bring her back. Jim's search is cut short when he is sent undercover, working with the FBI to try and find a high-profile Russian crime boss who is thought to be in port. By chance, his assignment brings him face to face with Kate.

The Kate he meets is not the Kate Shugak I knew in the first nine books. She has literally vanished. Kate cannot or will not face that she is alive and Jack Morgan is dead. She has left her home, her friends and even her name behind. She is lost in guilt and grief and anger. Yet she does not curl up in a corner or dive into a bottle. She works, hard and long, mastering new tasks running an air-taxi/freight service. Kate shapes how the world she works in is organized because she doesn't know how NOT to do that. She works because work is better than having time to think and much, much better than having time to feel. Kate has a job but she doesn't really have a life. This seems to have been her goal: to be "the working dead".

Her meeting with Jim Chopin begins events that will force her out of the Hide she has built for herself. She becomes embroiled in the case and she becomes angry at Jim. It seemed to me that she rages at him because he is full of life and he will not let her deny her own life.

The plot in "Midnight Come Again" is strong, relatively complex and darker than some of the other books. I was struck by the contrast between Kate's drinking session with Russian seamen in this book and her session with the Russian sailors in "Dead In The Water." In "Dead In The Water" the session was lightly flirtatious, Kate was in control and there was nothing more sinister in the room than an exuberant excess of testosterone. In "Midnight Come Again" the drinking session has an undercurrent of threat, Kate is damaged and vulnerable, and there is serious cause to worry about her.

Kate is dragged back to herself, not just by Jim Chopin but through contact with an old school friend and her family. Kate is given a context for how she is seen by others, learns new things about her grandmother and incurs a moral debt towards a young girl.

The emerging dynamic between Kate and Jim injects fresh emotional conflict while also dealing realistically with reactions to grief. Not just Kate's grief for Jack Morgan, but Jim's grief for seeming to lose the woman Kate used to be.

This book is a good stand-alone thriller. It is also a very skillful bridge between the Kate we knew before the events of "Hunter's Moon" and the Kate who is finding her way after it. The emotional tone is perfect and made "Midnight Come Again" a very satisfying read.

The title sounded like a quote but I wasn't familiar with the source. An Internet search suggested that it might be from Theodore Roethke's poem "A Dark Time." The tone seems right. It's a good poem. Go HERE to read it for yourself









( )
  MikeFinnFiction | May 16, 2020 |
This was another tough to read one in the series but not as bad as the last. The last book still haunts me, it was brutal. Reading about the after, the new Kate, the nearly empty shell of the person I knew. The shadows cling to Kate and her world, and she has abandoned herself. She disappeared without a word for months till one day Chopper Jim walks into the room, but his Kate is not there.
Jim has been put on an assignment looking into possible terrorist activity. He looked for Kate, but wasn't able to find her, till he traveled to his assignment and there she was, broken with a new name. She gets tangled in his assignment after Jim is hurt and separately they piece this mess together. Separately is the key word, both are too haunted to do anything together. There is a small bit of comfort that comes from the darkness, but even that quickly gets ugly again. I don't know where these two will go in the series. I'd always wanted something long term for the two of them, they work well together. The last book might have buried any chance of that. ~sigh~ I'd like to see Kate happy again. ( )
  TheYodamom | Aug 4, 2019 |
Not my favorite Dana Stabenow novel. I enjoy her characters, the recurring one and the introduction of new ones. I enjoy how she captures Alaska; the people, the systems, the nature. But the crime and/or thriller portion of this novel and the portrayal of the FBI fell rather flat. ( )
  MM_Jones | Nov 9, 2017 |
Another great Kate Schugak Alaska mystery. I can just picture Kate getting lost somewhere in Alaska after major trauma. Main characters are Kate and Chopper Jim...oh and Mutt plays a big role--defending Kate's honor.. Stabenow does a great job with all of them. I especially like her description of Kate's weak knee impression of a blonde Russian. The good guys collar the [big-bad-Russian] 'perps and all ends well. ( )
  buffalogr | Mar 31, 2016 |
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Fiction. Mystery. Romance. Thriller. HTML:Book 10: A Kate Shugak Novel
Edgar Award winner Dana Stabenow has written numerous atmospheric crime novels featuring the very prickly, very human Kate Shugak, but her novels also have a scene-stealing costar: Alaska, unforgiving, breathtaking, dangerous, and beautiful. Stabenow's evocation of this wilderness, combined with her talent for bringing characters to life and creating knuckle-whitening suspense, has made her "one of the strongest voices in crime fiction." (Seattle Times).
Now in Midnight Come Again, all these elements come together for Stabenow's most compelling Kate Shugak novel to date.
Kate, a former investigator for the Anchorage D.A. and now a P.I. for hire, is missing after a winter spent in mourning. Alaska State Trooper Jim Chopin, Kate's best friend, needs her to help him work a new case. He discovers her hiding out in Bering, a small fishing village on Alaska's western coast, living and working under an assumed nameâ?? working hard, as eighteen-hour workdays seem to be her only justification for getting up in the morning. But before they can even discuss Kate's last several months, or what Jim is doing looking for her in Bering, they're up to their eyes in Jim's case, which is suddenly more complicatedâ?? and more dangerousâ?? than they suspected.
A magnificent crime novel about life in America's last wilderness, the heart-wrenching grief that goes with love, and murder, Midnight Come Again is Dana Stabenow's best novel

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