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Bosch and Ballard combine forces in Michael Connelly’s ‘The Night Fire’ | Book review

The death of a former police officer leads Harry Bosch and Renee Ballard to solve a cold case in Connelly's latest dive into the world of the Los Angeles Police Department.

This cover image released by Little, Brown and Co. shows "The Night Fire," by Michael Connelly. (Little, Brown and Co. via AP)
This cover image released by Little, Brown and Co. shows "The Night Fire," by Michael Connelly. (Little, Brown and Co. via AP)Read moreAP

The Night Fire

By Michael Connelly

Little, Brown. 417 pp. $29

Reviewed by Jeff Ayers

In The Night Fire by Michael Connelly, John Jack Thompson, Harry Bosch’s first mentor when he became a police officer, dies. He leaves behind a gift for Bosch: a murder book that highlights a cold case from almost 30 years earlier.

At first glance the crime appears to be a simple drug deal gone wrong, but it was never resolved. Though he is officially retired, Bosch keeps busy working on cases, and he decides to take this one to his friend, Detective Renee Ballard, who works the night shift for the Los Angeles Police Department.

They had promised to work together on cases when they could, and he believes this is one is worth pursuing since it was important enough for his former partner to have taken the case files with him when he retired.

Ballard lands a case in a homeless encampment that seems on the surface to be a simple accident where a man sleeping inside a tent knocked over a heater and burned to death. Looking over the evidence, she begins to realize something doesn't quite feel right.

In addition to these two cases, Bosch reluctantly agrees to assist his half-brother, Mickey Haller, with his defense of a client who left DNA behind at the murder scene.

Ballard wonders why Bosch would get involved, but trusts him to do the right thing when it comes to justice.

Connelly is the Raymond Chandler of this generation, and readers will be studying his writing methods decades from now.

He has created another novel that feels authentic on every level, and the underlying theme of mortality running through the narrative makes everything in the story more urgent.