Book review: A Darkness more than Night by Michael Connelly
- Characters presentation
- The story
Michael Connelly is 54 years old and is a well-known writer from Los Angeles. He has spent his life writing detective stories in which he mostly uses Harry Bosch as the main character. Connelly has won lots of awards during is career. Terry McCaleb is happy living with his family, when FBI detective Jaye Winston comes to him and asks him for help on an unsolved case. It is a two-week-old investigation, and Winston thinks that the murderer will kill again if they don't stop him.
The Search
«Introduction. Count Dracula and his three female vampires. The book Salem's Lot. The search for knowledge in Dracula and Salem's Lot. Anne Rice's book Interview With the Vampire. Conclusion.»
«Through the evolution of the vampire novel, the search for knowledge and information remains a unifying theme that characterizes the genre. In Bram Stoker's Dracula, Stephen King's Salem's Lot, and Anne Rice's Interview with the Vampire, this quest for understanding about vampires and their origin...»
Compare and contrast the ways in which both authors might be seen to present an indictment of...
«Introduction. American society. The Catcher in the Rye. The Virgin Suicides’. Both authors reference. Restrictive impact of the media. Conclusion.»
«There is an argument that American society was founded or widely based on the American Dream, an idea based on freedom, and the belief that prosperity will occur through hard work, with equal opportunity for all. This was the basis for the American Declaration of Independence, which stated 'All men...»
'The vulnerable human in his extremity meets the indifferent but infinitely varied forces of...
«Introduction. Hardy presents Tess as a manipulated young woman. Power of setting. Tess of the D’Urbervilles’. Wordsworth. Charles and Sarah. Conclusion.»
«The various setting, natural environments and resultant social pressures that are presented by our three writers, are shown to have serious consequences and effects on the physically vulnerable or emotionally sensitive characters presented by Hardy, Fowles and Wordsworth. Hardy presents Tess as...»