Michael Connelly introduces readers to a new character in his police procedurals with Detective Sergeant Stillwell of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department in Nightshade, arriving on store shelves May 20. Stillwell finds himself assigned to Santa Catalina Island, 22 miles off the Southern California coast, after the politics of the homicide department have forced him off the mainland.
On Catalina, Stillwell
leads the sheriff’s substation where he finds most of his workload confined to
drunk and disorderly arrests and petty theft cases. He starts most days
watching the folks who disembark the Catalina Express, a ferry from the
mainland. Many of the tourists expect to be gambling at the Catalina Casino not
realizing that it is and has always been a ballroom and a movie theatre.
Today is going to be
different because a hull scraper has reported his encounter with a human body anchored down 33 feet under a
private boat. Having been a recovery diver when he worked on the mainland, Stillwell
suits up for the cold water and plunges into the ocean to verify the claim.
Stillwell theorizes the body has been in the water for at least four days; he
determines it is a woman who has dark hair with a distinct streak of purple dye.
As he surfaces, he
plans the next steps in the investigation: call out the dive team, the homicide
unit, and the coroner’s investigators from Los Angeles. Once he turns the
murder over to the mainland team, he knows he should stand down but instead he
works the case from the island side. He finds himself once again pitted against
homicide cop Rex Ahearn, known by other cops as A-hole or King A-hole, who
wants Stillwell to back off from the case.
Stillwell knows that much
investigation can be done on the island rather than from a chair in the homicide
unit. Soon, he is on the trail of the woman called “Nightshade,” but once he
turns that information over to Ahearn, he finds himself called on the carpet by
his boss on the mainland. When Ahearn pins the murder of Nightshade on the
wrong assailant, will Stillwell accept that outcome or will he bring in the
real killer himself?
Connelly has left the
streets of Los Angeles behind for this island in the Pacific that was once owned
by William Wrigley Jr. of chewing gum fame. Along with the change in law
enforcement venue, the Nightshade novel introduces a wide-range of supporting
characters as well as a few “bad guys.”
After Michael Connelly
spent three years covering crime in Los Angeles, he wrote his first novel
featuring Harry Bosch, The Black Echo, which he based partly on a true
crime. Three of Connelly’s characters have found success on streaming platforms
Amazon Prime and Netflix: Bosch, Bosch: Legacy, and The Lincoln Lawyer with a
third character, Renee Ballard, promised her own series.
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