Reviews

Dead Man Running by Steve Hamilton

katel1970's review against another edition

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3.0

In general, I like this series. And Hamilton hadn't written an Alex McKnight book in a few years, so I was looking forward to it. But it wasn't set in the UP, so it didn't have the usual sidekick characters. I just felt this could have been a standalone novel rather than billing it as a McKnight novel and then not having the aspects I like about those books. Still a good story.

jacki_f's review against another edition

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4.0

Steve Hamilton has written 10 books about Alex McKnight, a former police officer and one time baseball pitcher, who has retired to Paradise (a tiny town in upper Michigan). Over the course of the series he has worked on and off as a Private Investigator and when this book opens he's working as a bounty hunter. However he's about to get drawn into a man hunt, because in Arizona the FBI are on the trail of a serial killer who has been apprehended but says that he will only talk to Alex McKnight.

I feel extremely ambivalent about this book - it's a very good thriller but it is evolving a series that I love into something that I'm not so sure about. It's highly readable - it draws you in immediately in a way that's very cinematic and it keeps up the tension and pace throughout. But a lot of the charm of this series has been the wry humour, the strong sense of place and the very real characters and those things are almost entirely lost. The ending suggests that there will be another Alex McKnight book at some stage - hooray - but also that this book sets the tone for the next and presumably any that are to follow.

It has always perplexed me that this series hasn't attracted more attention and love and I presume that this is a move to make it more commercial. And this is a good thriller - albeit more unpleasant than I like (there's too much detail about how people get murdered in various nasty ways). But it's not really Alex McKnight #11, it's more Alex McKnight 2.0 #1, and I feel sad about that. If you are also in mourning for the series that was, I point you in the direction of Paul Doiron's Mike Bowditch series, which has a similar feel to it (although without the humour).

rozlev's review against another edition

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5.0

You can't go wrong with Steve Hamilton and his Alex McKnight series. Couldn't put it down. If you're new to the series start at the beginning with A Cold Day in Paradise and read them all.

abibliofob's review against another edition

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5.0

Finally a new Alex McKnight story, I am a little sad that it mostly takes place outside the environment of the upper peninsula that we usually see our hero. But it's an Alex McKnight story so who cares. This is one great rollercoaster of a thriller and well worth the wait. I only hope that the next one will arrive soon.

pamseven's review against another edition

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5.0

Full disclosure, I am a HUGE Steve Hamilton fan, especially the Alex McKnight series. And it's been
5 years since we've gotten a new one. So you can imagine my excitement when I was granted an ARC for this new one. I was given the book on Monday and devoured it that same day. Hamilton does not disappoint.
I find Alex to be such a compelling protagonist and the usual setting of the Michigan Upper Pennisula is intriguing. If I have any quibbles about this latest book, it's that it takes place largely outside of Michigan and we don't get to spend much time with regulars Jackie, Vinnie and Leon. I have looked forward to every new Hamilton book since I discovered him many years ago and this one has not changed my mind.

thriller_chick's review against another edition

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4.0

Steve Hamilton where have you been???????
I was so excited to see you come back as once I found Alex I slammed the entire series.
I was slightly worried that having been gone so long this one may not be as good but I knew within the first few chapters that was not the case.

Great read and I’m hoping you are already working on more!

achoward's review against another edition

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1.0

I'm going to be in the minority here, but I really did not enjoy this book.

It is a bit of a departure for Alex McKnight, heading out of Paradise, MI because a serial killer wants to talk to him - a serial killer unknown to him either by sight or name. Martin Livermore promises to lead the FBI and local authorities to proof of his crimes, but only if Alex McKnight is there. Once there, it's clear that while Alex does not know Livermore, Livermore knows plenty about him, from his minor league baseball days to his work as a Detroit cop and the incident that caused him to leave the force and return to Paradise.

OK, that's fine - sometimes you have to go along with the premise to get into the story. Sometimes it pays off. This time, however, it did not.

Probably spoilers ahead, so....

Spoiler
That investigators get in deep with criminals of all sorts is not a newsflash. But this one simply became more and more unbelievable as the book went along. There are also some of the usual cliches/tropes, which we'll get into.

Livermore leads various law enforcement personnel (and Alex) into the desert in Arizona, and subsequently through what amounts to a small canyon. Alex has his doubts about the whole thing, but of course, the FBI guys say they have to go through with it, even if they are still suspicious that Alex knows something about Livermore when he says he doesn't.

The team gets shredded by armaments Livermore has embedded into the wall of the small passageway/canyon thing. But not Alex. Just before everything fires, he's taken to the ground by one of the FBI agents because Livermore stops, turns around, and looks at him. Said look apparently is enough for the suspicious FBI agent, who effectively saves his life, taking him out of the line of fire, while getting killed himself.

We then go on to hit all the usual tropes: Alex goes to the scenes of the various killings, picks up on and interprets the supersmart killer's codes or symbols, supersmart killer playing not just the long game, but the looooong game, having picked out Alex as his ultimate target years ago because of something that happened decades ago, bringing back Alex's ex-wife into the picture to act as bait, etc.

Speaking of the ex-wife, the whole book is devoid of women except as victims in the main story. They are either already dead, killed while the supersmart killer plants clues for Alex to follow so Alex ends up either tripping a napalm(!) trap that kills one woman or sleeping in a room below where supersmart killer has merrily drilled through the floor above Alex's hotel room so he gets covered in the woman's blood as supersmart killer tortures and kills her, or a current victim (the ex-wife).

From the outset, it was difficult to put aside disbelief. As each woman dies, or after Alex stumbles across another clue, it got harder and harder.

Alex is also not himself in this book, compared to all the previous ones. In this one, he's laser -focused on tracking down the killer. That's fine, and would be completely believable if he wasn't such a bumbler without a lick of sense at times, which is how he is in all the previous books. He does get shot at and injured a couple of times here, so at least that is somewhat in tune with the previous books, but that isn't enough. Here, Alex is dour, and apparently able to grasp the psyche of a serial killer he's never met and knows nothing about, unlike the FBI, who can't seem to figure things out if he isn't there.

The end: let's talk about that. I know people get obsessed by things or people. But getting obsessed with a person you met, once, decades ago, and barely spoke to? That's the connection between Livermore and Alex: he's pissed off because Alex married Jeannie, claiming Alex "stole" her because she wasn't immediately enamored by Livermore when he spoke a few words to her when they were thirteen and she was sitting on the dock at her grandparent's house. That's is - that's the "twist", such as it is.

Livermore abducts Jeannie, ties her up n an elaborate fashion. Alex shows up, and instead of taking appropriate precautions, knowing what he's dealing with, just walks right into the Livermore house. He gets knocked out and then handcuffed to a sink via the plumbing under it. Livermore, of course, plans all sorts of tortuous things for Jeannine when she doesn't act the way he wants. Conveniently, he leaves Alex handcuffed to the sink and takes her down to the basement, where he stores the bodies and bones of his victims.

Naturally, Alex manages to get loose, stumbles down to the basement, and thanks to help from Jeannie, who manages, somehow, to stab Livermore in the back just as he's about to kill Alex, strangles Livermore with the handcuff chain as he turns to Jeannine, the knife sticking out of his back.


And that's it. That's the end. Alex goes back to Paradise, fields a call or two from Jeannie. I suppose this means she'll be popping up in another book. If she does, her fate will probably not be a good one.

This book had none of the humor of the previous books in this series. It started dark and got darker, and the usual characters only make an appearance in the beginning and at the end. We're left with a completely different Alex hauling himself around chasing a serial killer who is, of course, smarter than anyone else, ever, and leaves no forensics except those he intends to leave.

Not recommended.

cook_memorial_public_library's review against another edition

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4.0

A 2018 staff favorite recommended by Jane. Check our catalog: https://encore.cooklib.org/iii/encore/search?formids=target&lang=eng&suite=def&reservedids=lang%2Csuite&submitmode=&submitname=&target=dead+man+running+hamilton

al27caro's review against another edition

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adventurous mysterious tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.0

I liked this the least of all the Alex McKnight books.  Way too much violence, not enough about upper peninsula Michigan.

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rbweb3's review against another edition

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tense fast-paced

4.5