Retrato do autor

Gerry Boyle

Autor(a) de Deadline

15+ Works 572 Membros 40 Críticas 1 Favorited

About the Author

Gerry Boyle is an award-winning columnist for the Central Maine Morning Sentinel.

Séries

Obras por Gerry Boyle

Deadline (1993) 89 exemplares
Bloodline (1995) 61 exemplares
Borderline (1966) 54 exemplares
Pretty Dead (2003) 54 exemplares
Lifeline (1996) 47 exemplares
Potshot (1997) 47 exemplares
Cover Story (2000) 46 exemplares
Port City Shakedown (2009) 39 exemplares
Home Body (1615) 38 exemplares
Port City Black And White (2011) 27 exemplares
Damaged Goods (2010) 22 exemplares
Straw Man (2016) 21 exemplares
Once Burned (2015) 10 exemplares
Robbed Blind (2022) 9 exemplares
Random Act (2019) 8 exemplares

Associated Works

A Healing Touch: True Stories of Life, Death, and Hospice (2008) — Contribuidor — 43 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Data de nascimento
1956
Sexo
male
Local de nascimento
Chicago, Illinois, USA
Locais de residência
Warwick, Rhode Island, USA (youth)
Maine, USA

Membros

Discussions

Robbed Blind by Gerry Boyle DEC2022 LTER em Reviews of Early Reviewers Books (Janeiro 2023)

Críticas

Esta crítica foi escrita no âmbito dos Primeiros Críticos do LibraryThing.
This crime fiction novel held my attention and was a quick read. Freelance reporter (working for a NYT story), Jack McMorrow, becomes involved in solving a series of robberies and the murder of a man who collects religious relics. The characters are likeable and the story moves at a fast pace.
½
 
Assinalado
JGoto | 4 outras críticas | Feb 3, 2023 |
Esta crítica foi escrita no âmbito dos Primeiros Críticos do LibraryThing.
I lived in New England for several years and enjoyed reading mystery and thriller titles situated in the region. Numerous authors have provided readers with exciting police procedurals, mysteries, and suspense titles that highlight the area’s diverse geography and characters to life. None does it better the Gerry Boyle and his Poverty, Maine, ace reporter of the human condition, Jack McMorrow. In Robbed Blind, McMorrow is a stringer for the New York Times developing a feature article on people in small towns in Maine who work the late night to early morning shift while a robber, called the Zombie, is holding up mom and pop stores at gun point. At 4:45 a.m. one morning he calls on a small 24-hour convenience store to talk to the clerk only to find she has just been robbed and assaulted. McMorrow develops a professional friendship with her which leads him to a press-friendly police officer, an odd religious Catholic traditionalist who collects artifacts from closed churches, and assorted other small town frightened natives who have concerns about the Zombie being able to evade the local police force. Additional illegal events rock the small town of Clarkston that McMorrow follows up on seeking justice for his new found friends while the police have given their full time to catching the Zombie.

A sub-plot takes place in McMorrow’s home town of Prosperity that involves his twelve year old daughter, her friend, and a group of government anarchists using the young girl’s mother’s rural and remote large property to train with weapons for a “war” against local, state, and federal officials. Jack finds out about this potentially violent militia but is warned to stay away or put himself and his family in danger. Jack, of course, cannot ignore the warning and the book ends with the reader wondering whether the source for the surprise assault on Jack can be tied to his story on the Zombie or his interest in stopping the anarchists from attacking government officials.

A book that ends with a cliffhanger that will not be resolved until the next book in the series is reminiscent of television rather than a book series. But I look forward to the next Jack McMorrow book and am rooting for a positive outcome as the author begins wrapping up the series. Robbing Blind is well worth reading and is a wonderful primer on how investigative journalists ply their trade.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
alohaboy | 4 outras críticas | Jan 26, 2023 |
Esta crítica foi escrita no âmbito dos Primeiros Críticos do LibraryThing.
This was my first book by Gerry Boyle. I enjoyed the book and will try to find earlier books from the series. I prefer to read books in serial form in order so this may take some time.
 
Assinalado
charlottem | 4 outras críticas | Jan 21, 2023 |
Esta crítica foi escrita no âmbito dos Primeiros Críticos do LibraryThing.
Robbed Blind is written by Gerry Boyle and is Book #13 in his Jack McMorrow series.
Gerry Boyle is a Maine author, gifted in the ‘art of Noir”, gifted in his Jack McMorrow character, and gritty, very realistic descriptions of central Maine and its citizens.
Gerry Boyle’s early career was as a journalist, reporting for the Rumford Falls Times , and then the Waterville Morning Sentinel as a reporter and columnist, which is where I first became acquainted with his work.
His first Jack McMorrow book, Deadline, was published in 1993. I have to assume that the character of Jack McMorrow was based on Gerry Boyle’s own experiences.
He has published 12 Jack McMorrow books. Robbed Blind is the 13th.
He has also published 2 Brandon Blake books.
I am familiar with Gerry Boyle’s early work as a reporter and columnist, having lived in central Maine and reading the Waterville Morning Sentinel for decades now. I was interested in his early works because I always want to support a Maine author. His books were very good. I also like reading about places and characters that I know about and can relate to. Jack McMorrow’s residence in the town of ‘Prosperity’ is a dead ringer for a town not too far from my own in rural, central Maine.
When I was awarded a copy of Gerry Boyle’s latest book from Library Thing in exchange for an honest review, I was happy to delve back into the Jack McMorrow character again.
Although I like Gerry Boyle’s writing very much - it is tense, to the point, realistic, well-plotted and very personal, very NOIR, this was a bit of a frustrating, depressing read for me.
On page 202, our character, Jack McMorrow, loses it when confronted with Jason - a gun-toting,
militia/mercenary wanna-be, a felon, a drunk, a scumbag and domestic abuser. “Really, I’m sick
to death of people like you. Angry, stupid, filled with entitlement and self-pity. Always picking on somebody you think won’t fight back.”
My feelings exactly about so many of my fellow humans. I don’t like those feelings but they stare me in the face everyday. I understand Jack McMorrow and his frustrations very well.
When the last words of the book were.…….”to be continued”, I was surprised and confused.
But I read a press release from the publisher Islandport Press, which stated that “Islandport Press
and Gerry Boyle have reached an agreement for 2 new Jack McMorrow mystery titles that will effectively bring an exciting close to the popular series after more than 30 years and 14 novels.”
Five Stars ***** and I can’t wait for the next Jack McMorrow title.
Thank you to Library Thing.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
diana.hauser | 4 outras críticas | Jan 19, 2023 |

Prémios

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Estatísticas

Obras
15
Also by
1
Membros
572
Popularidade
#43,783
Avaliação
½ 3.5
Críticas
40
ISBN
63
Línguas
1
Marcado como favorito
1

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