CHASING DARKNESS (Pub. 2008) by Robert Crais was my first read by this author, and is Crais' 15th novel. It was a good read in the fairly classic P.I. who-done-it style. I picked this story up at the recommendation of several Goodreads folks, as well as my favorite author.
Crais' writing style is strong, the prose and the story flow easily. It mostly held my interest all the way through, admittedly with a couple slower spots, but not enough to call it boggy.
The story opens in California, with a fire blazing in Laurel Canyon, and two cops going door to door to make sure all the residents have evacuated. They come to an unkempt home and have reason to believe the resident is still inside, so they go in. They find the man, shot through the head in an apparent suicide move, with a picture album full of viciously murdered women laying at the dead man's feet.
Elvis Cole, the P.I. in the story, gets pulled in because the suicide victim turns out to be a guy he helped get off of a murder charge years ago, along with the city's leading defense attorney. But the suicide and the photos in the murder book don't ring true to Elvis, so he sets out to get to the bottom of it.
The story has some interesting twists, a couple red herrings and a surprise who-done-it twist at the end. The climax has a good amount of tension, action and what's-gonna-happen, along with a satisfying, although somewhat sad, ending. I like the Elvis Cole character, all though he doesn't have any distinguishing features or character traits, IMO, and his sidekick, Pike, is only vaguely in the picture on/off.
All in all, it was a good read, but not a great read. I base my 5-star ratings on whether I would gladly read a book again, and CHASING DARKNESS doesn't quite get there for me. I don't regret the time spent reading it, but nothing about it will live in my memory, there were no unique snatches of dialogue or insightful thoughts, no major or vivid action. But it's a good story told in the standard P.I. vein, and worth reading at least once.