
Cries of the Lost
Author: Chris Knopf
Narrator: Donald Corren
Unabridged: 8 hr 24 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Published: 10/15/2013
Categories: Fiction, Mystery & Detective

Author: Chris Knopf
Narrator: Donald Corren
Unabridged: 8 hr 24 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Published: 10/15/2013
Categories: Fiction, Mystery & Detective
Chris Knopf’s mystery novels have received exceptional awards and accolades, with critics likening his character Sam Aquillo to Dashiell Hammett’s Sam Spade, Raymond Chandler’s Philip Marlowe, and Robert B. Parker’s Spenser, while repeatedly comparing Knopf’s work to that of Elmore Leonard, John D. MacDonald, and Ross Macdonald. Two Time was one of thirteen mysteries listed as recommended summer reading in the New York Times Book Review, and Publishers Weekly chose it as one of the “Best 100 Books for 2006.†Head Wounds won the 2008 Benjamin Franklin Award for Best Mystery. Dead Anyway was listed on the 2012 Best Fiction lists of both Publishers Weekly and Kirkus Reviews. Knopf is a sailor, cabinetmaker, and advertising executive in Connecticut. He and his wife Mary also spend considerable time at their Long Island home in Southampton.
Arthur Cathcart and Natsumi Fitzgerald's second appearance follows "Dead Anyway" and precedes "A Billion Ways to Die." The first book followed Arthur's recovery from a bullet to the brain (his wife received a similar wound and didn't survive). If the first book was a revenge novel, with Arthur aveng......more
Combining the authentic science and gadgetry of a Tom Clancy novel, the global danger and excitement of James Bond, and the flawed protagonists and convincing relationships of LeHane’s Kenzie and Genarro, Chris Knopf’s Cries of the Lost is a thoroughly engaging stand-alone mystery, and the second in......more
Despite my however brief but admittedly multiple misgivings, this book turned out to be quite nearly as much fun as its predecessor was. Seeing the two main characters return to form and action, and yet so out of depth and place was in equal parts dubious yet exciting. The former because I wasn't sur......more