Anonymous wrote:I love Harry Bosch but I like all of Michael Connolly’s protagonists. When the shooting scene happened earlier in the book and I briefly thought Harry was dead, I was surprised at how I felt thinking Harry might be dead. I have read every single Michael Connelly book and will continue to read. This one was in the middle of the pack. My favorite is The Poet and my least favorite is Nine Dragons.
The Poet was my favorite too.
Curious, to any other long-time readers, have you noticed a change in the last ten years or so? Do you think he might have a ghostwriter? Somewhere around the first Ballard book, I swear there was a subtle change in style. There was even one book — either the first Ballard book or the second? — where the style went back and forth, like he was writing the Bosch chapters and someone else the Ballard chapters. Even if there is a collaborator, I suspect he reworks the draft to give it his own style. But I’ve worked as a copyeditor and tend to notice sentence structure and grammar choices, and I just finished the latest and once again kept having the feeling that “this is 20-something-Internet-freelancer sentence structure, not middle-aged-former-reporter sentence structure.”
I googled a bit, and he’s considered to be an author who does NOT use ghostwriters. It’s possible that his own writing style has been influenced by Internet writing over the years, or that he’s rushing or burned out and just doesn’t put in quite as much care as he once did. As a reader, I really don’t care one way or the other; I’m just driven slightly crazy by noticing this change that no one else seems to notice. Curious what other longtime readers think.