In The Drop, Michael Connelly's long-running protagonist, Det. Harry Bosch, faces end-of-career issues in the Los Angeles police department's Open/Unsolved Unit. In one day, he gets two hits: a DNA match on a 21-year-old murder-rape case and an unexpected fresh body. The son of Councilman Irvin Irving--Bosch's nemesis from previous novels in the 17-book series--has jumped or been dropped from his hotel balcony, and Irving inexplicably requests Bosch as investigator. It looks to be a case of "high jingo"--political complications threatening the quest for truth and justice to which Bosch is so committed.
As the Irving case gains momentum, the politics threaten to engulf an old friend and colleague, and Bosch may have no one left that he can trust. Meanwhile, logic contradicts fact as the blood found on the victim of the unsolved murder-rape belongs to a man who was eight years old at the time of the crime. Even Bosch's new partner seems to be working against him. Worst of all, he begins to doubt his own abilities: is Bosch too old for the job?
Fans of Connelly's series will exult in another round of Bosch-versus-the-world (and the LAPD); he exhibits all his old charms and skills, as well as tenderness towards his teenage daughter (who develops in her own right as a character). New readers will follow the action perfectly; The Drop can confidently stand alone. The evocation of the Los Angeles setting is lovely as usual, and the action's crescendo hits all the right notes. Don't take your eyes off Connelly yet--Bosch is ready to fight another round. --Julia Jenkins, librarian and blogger at pages of julia