Those who love Harry Bosch! discussion
What to read AFTER Harry Bosch?
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I would chalk it up to having a bad translation except I have heard similiar remarks from others who read him in English. Sorry, but I enjoy his writing style.

Gorky Park. I normally start with the first in the series but here it is essential.

I would chalk it up to having a bad translation except I have hear..."
I also happen to love/like all the Reacher books and perhaps because of the fast pace I have never found them to be ill-written. I will try to pay more attention with the next novel due sometimes later this year. I love the fact that Reacher just chooses to get involved on the side of the underdog or victims etc.


Book #1 The Deep Blue Good-by (my review)

I have been a great fan of McGee in the past but now I am ambivalent about the portrayal of women in the books.

Compared to today, he's still better than half the men I know.
The better I get to know men, the more I find myself loving dogs.
- Charles de Gaulle

Compared to today, he's still better than half the men I know. "
On that, I agree.

I am new to Harry Bosch and haven't read every book in the series (in fact I am listening to most on Audible) so am not mourning the loss of Harry...is the series over?
No one has mentioned the Walt Longmire series by Craig Johnson. I love the setting in Wyoming/Colorado and the interface with the Native American community. David Baldacci has “a series of series” but not enough to keep you going for years! I have only read one true Mickey Haller and 2 of the Jack MacEvoy books, all good, but without the in depth exploration of a character like Bosch. Sorta wish I hadn't started watching the TV series as now I can’t get Titus Welliver’s image out of my head.

- Ace Atkin's Mississippi sheriff Quinn Colson, another great series to be read in order. Atkins was a crime reporter like Connelly and also writes the new Robert Parker/Spencer novels (for my money, much better than Parker's last books in the franchise in which Spencer took cases for Krispy Kreme donuts).
- Barry Eisler's John Rain and Livia Lone books (with great conflicted characters). Rain is a Japanese-American assassin with a sense of ethics. Livia Lone is a Seattle police detective who was trafficked from Thailand as a child and moonlights giving traffickers and serial rapists a dirt nap. Separate series with overlapping characters that should be read in order.
- Anything by George Pelicanos. I once saw Pelicanos and Connelly read together for an event at a local bookstore. They are fans of each other's work. He was also a writer/producer for three HBO series, The Wire, The Deuce and Treme.

While I did not like the Davenport novels much (after the first), I did very much enjoy most of Sandford's Vigil Flowers series.

It's timely, it's set primarily in LA, and it's very good.



I loved getting to know the city of LA and Hollywood through the sense of place Michael Connelly expresses. So I tried the C J Box Highway series as Linda suggested. Couldn’t stop! Since I grew up in neighboring states, it really resonated with me. I also loved how the landscape is like a character. Box also has an amazing way of painting pictures with words. If I ever write a novel, I hope it will be like his.
When I got all the Cloud Library audiobook freebies I could from that series (have not located any Cassie Dewell books past Paradise Valley to check out for free), I tried to find something else and couldn’t. The next two books I chose from the popular audiobook selections that I started, I found too shallow.
Kudos to Connolly (the King of detective thrillers) and Box (close second) on writing fiction you can’t put down (or turn off in my case) that makes you feel like you are right there yet keeps you second guessing throughout.


Scott wrote: "I also recommend Joe Ide's IQ. Isaiah Quintabe is more Sherlock Holmes than Bosch: he's smart and he's outside the legal system. He's friends with grifters, lowlifes, rap stars, and other bad peopl..."
Thanks for these recommendations - I just finished the first Long Beach PD book and found it very similar in approach to a Bosch book. Strong on procedurals and "melancholy" characters, but without the gritty clinical details or snarky detective attitudes of a lot of detective/crime books. Will definitely be reading the others. And I've also checked out Joe Ide's first book
Books mentioned in this topic
No Middle Name: The Complete Collected Jack Reacher Short Stories (other topics)Back of Beyond (other topics)
Naked in Death (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
C.J. Box (other topics)Harlan Coben (other topics)
Jo Nesbø (other topics)
I've never read Smith. Any particular book you recommend?