Product Details
Bloodlines: An Irene Kelly Novel (Irene Kelly Mysteries)

Bloodlines: An Irene Kelly Novel (Irene Kelly Mysteries)
By Jan Burke

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Product Description

Edgar® Award winner Jan Burke continues her USA Today bestselling Irene Kelly series with a suspense-laced novel of buried secrets, old friends, and new dangers -- in "a brilliant exhibition of what the crime genre can offer" (The Baltimore Sun). Sweeping across decades, Burke masterfully unearths a cold case that is far from closed while introducing an intrepid novice reporter, Irene Kelly, learning the ropes from her mentor, Conn O'Connor. From the late fifties, when a bloodstained car is buried on a farm and a wealthy family disappears at sea . . . to the seventies, when Irene makes shocking connections and brashly tracks a killer from the past . . . to today, when new threats and deadly surprises are closing in on the veteran journalist and her husband, Frank Harriman, Bloodlines follows a fascinating labyrinth of lives, loves, sins, and secrets -- with the irrepressible Irene Kelly at its core.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #103161 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-08-29
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 672 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review
Best-selling author Jan Burke's heroine, reporter Irene Kelly (Bones) returns in a novel that in less capable hands might seem like just another ho-hum story about the kidnapping of an infant who might or might not have been the child of a wealthy couple found dead under somewhat clouded circumstances. But it's really an intricate and involving story about hero worship--the affection of a cub reporter for his mentor, and the efforts of a young woman journalist who does them both proud by getting to the bottom of a two-decades old mystery; a bloodstained car buried on a farm and unearthed twenty years later, a dead nursemaid, and the missing heir to a fortune left by a couple who disappeared at sea the same weekend reporter Jack Corrigan was beaten and left for dead. Neither Corrigan nor young Conn O'Connor, his protégé, has ever unraveled the connection between those events, but with the discovery of the buried car that Corrigan believed to his dying day he witnessed disappearing under tons of dirt the night he was attacked, Irene finds herself following an old trail that may lead her right into harm's way herself. Bloodlines is one of Burke's best, a well-paced, deftly plotted mystery that will delight her many fans. --Jane Adams

From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Divided into three parts with 20-year intervals in between, Burke's superb new Irene Kelly novel (after 1999's Edgar-winning Bones) is a literary triumph. In 1958, Conn O'Connor, a brash young reporter for the Las Piernas News-Express, is taken under the wing of veteran Jack Corrigan, who is nearly killed after claiming to have seen a blood-spattered car buried on a farm. In 1978, another brash youngster—Irene Kelly—in turn is taken under O'Connor's wing. By 1998, Irene is the veteran, mentoring two rookies. The sweep of events over such a long time span imparts a certain majesty. There are murders, to be sure, but little mystery, since it's clear early on who is responsible. The deaths serve more as a tragic link across the years and to the heartbroken families who grow old awaiting resolution. Several secondary characters from Burke's earlier novels appear in part three, furthering the sense of events coming full circle. In the end, it's the human relationships that stick in the mind and the heart. A few flaws—dangling loose ends, too many summaries and, most serious, a disappointing slide back into standard crime-fiction mode—don't diminish the book's overall strength and enormous charm. With its multiple rich story lines, dead-on newsroom atmosphere and friendships that deepen through the decades, this is an extremely satisfying work. FYI:Burke has also received Agatha and Macavity awards as well as the Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine Award.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review
"Ever since her auspicious debut, Jan Burke has raised the emotional ante with each succeeding book."


Customer Reviews

No Jump the Shark here5
Usually when an author resorts to backstories long after a series has started it has the smell of a sitcom wedding or new baby, heralding the death of something that was once interesting or amusing. That is so not the case here. I won't retread the plot since that is done so nicely elsewhere in these reviews. But this book that goes into the background of Irene and her mentor O'Connor not only succeeds wonderfully, it takes what up to now has just been a plotline (O'Connor blown up, Irene taking over his desk, his rather nasty son who pops up from time to time) and turns it into a sort of heartache that most of these wonderful characters are long dead and gone. This is a book that if it is your first Irene Kelly read, I envy you. You can now start the series with emotional knowledge that will make the series more enjoyable than they originally were if that is possible.

great crime thriller 5
In January 1958 thugs badly beat Jack Corrigan after he sees a farmer bury a car. Meanwhile the bodies of wealthy socialites Mr. and Mrs. Duchane wash up on the beach. Their son Todd, his wife Katy and her dog who were also on the yacht with them remain missing; their baby is kidnapped and the nurse is left for dead. Although Corrigan and his protégée reporter Conn O'Connor work the case, they can't solve the crimes.

In 1978, reporter Irene Kelly covers the groundbreaking of a shopping center when a car is uncovered. Inside the trunk are the remains of Katy, Todd and the dog. O'Connor works with Irene to find evidence to bring the criminals to justice. When they get too close Irene and the man thought to be the Duchane heir are kidnapped and left to die. O'Connor saves her and the kidnappers go to jail but again, the mastermind can't be implicated. In the present, Irene and her protégée are again kidnapped by the same thugs who kidnapped her in 1978 because the mastermind is afraid they finally found enough evidence to implicate him.

Jan Burke has written her best work to date, bar none. The crime thriller is written for the first part in the third person and the rest of the book is told from Irene's point of view, a technique that works brilliantly for this particular work. Readers are treated to some very special characters who had a formidable impact on Irene's career and the audience will feel their every emotion. In addition to brilliant characterizations, BLOODLINES contains a gripping story line that keeps reader attention from first to last page.

Harriet Klausner

A Spellbinding, Chilling Thriller!5
"Bloodlines'" storyline, its characters, and the heinous crimes which mar their lives with so much suffering, span three generations. This novel will introduce you to some fascinating individuals. You will read their compelling stories, watch them play-out, and see how they connect, like pieces of some great puzzle designed by a psychopathic sadist. This is a tale of murder most foul, blackmail, psychological torture, fear and more murder. Jan Burke creates three-dimensional evil here. It lives and breathes in one of her characters - a man she constructs of paper and ink on the printed page, who brings out my own childhood terrors of the dark and monsters who lurk beneath the bed - a terrifying malevolent golum of a human being. I've known a lot of fictional villains, and this one is grim indeed. He permeates the story with a sinister presence and leaves everyone, including the reader, with a sense of foreboding that lingers after the book's conclusion.

I had never read an Irene Kelly mystery before, nor anything else by Jan Burke. I am fortunate that I began here, late in the series, because this novel goes back to Ms. Kelly' youth, where she begins as a reporter for the Las Piernas News Express. So now that I plan to read the entire series, I have had the opportunity to know her initially, as a young girl and professional. However, the beginning of the story does not take place in the spring of 1978, when Irene accepts a job at the Express, covering hard news. The story begins in January 1958.

On January 4, 1958, Jack Corrigan, veteran reporter for the News Express, is almost killed after he is abducted from a cocktail party, severely beaten, and left for dead in the swamps near Las Piernas. Upon first regaining consciousness, he witnesses the burial of a bloodstained car in a farmer's field. He understands that he is hung-over, in pain, and concussed. However, in any state, he surely knows when he is seeing suspicious activity. With the little strength he has left, he investigates to make sure he is not hallucinating. The man driving the tractor sees him from a distance, and calls someone back to the scene to make sure Jack will never investigate again. The next day he is discovered, crawling out of the wetlands, looking and smelling like death. And he almost is - dead!

That same night, a luxury yacht is lost during a storm at sea off the Las Piernas coast. Two bodies wash up within a short period. They were the Ducanes, a very wealthy couple and the boat's owners. Another couple was apparently on board with them - their son Todd and his young wife, Katy, who just celebrated her 21st birthday. Their bodies were never recovered and it was assumed, for lack of other evidence, that they also drowned. Katy and Todd's infant son was kidnapped that evening also. No ransom phone calls or letters were received. In fact no one was ever able to obtain information or clues leading to the whereabouts of the child. The nanny, who was caring for him, was found murdered in the nursery. Corrigan knew the baby's parents well, and had known Katy, and adored her, since her own infancy. She called him Uncle Jack and left property to him in her will. Needless to say, he was heartbroken, when he was well enough to hear the news.

Twenty years later, in 1978, Irene Kelly comes to work for the Express, after a stint as a reporter in Bakersfield. Conn O'Conner, who had been Jack's protege, student, foster son and best friend since 1936, when he was an 8 year-old paperboy, now mentors Irene. The 1958 murders and kidnapping have never been solved. Rookie reporter Irene is sent out to cover the groundbreaking of a new shopping mall, and discovers something much bigger. The construction crew at the site uncovers a buried car containing human remains. O'Connor decides to work the story with Irene. She was there when the car was unearthed, asked the right questions and deals well with the difficult detective in charge of the case.

"Bloodlines" explores the complex relationship between many of the characters who are first introduced in 1936, including the strong bond between Corrigan and O'Connor. There's another secondary but important mystery that began in the 1940s, when Conn's beloved sister, Maureen, was murdered. The crime was never solved. The mentor-protege relationship continues between Conn and Jack into the 1950s, however they're more like friends and colleagues. They work closely together, especially after Jack's beating. Then Conn mentors the young Irene in the 1970s and passes along what he had learned as they pick up more clues about the crimes committed in 1958. The book's last segment is set in 2000, when all loose strings are masterfully tied off.

Jan Burke also explores here the history of the newspaper industry and the changes brought about with the growing popularity of television. Her writing is taut, her pace fast and fluid, and her characters are most original and likeable. She gives them depth, which along with a spellbinding narrative, makes this novel a real keeper. A definite 5 star recommendation!
JANA