Get 4 Books for $1
plus a FREE gift
with membership
Already a Member?
The Scarecrow By Michael Connelly

The Scarecrow

by Michael Connelly

Mem. Ed. $18.99

Pub. Ed. $27.99

You pay $0.25

Bonus Content

The Scarecrow

After being forced by budget cuts to take a buyout from the Los Angeles Times, crime reporter Jack McEvoy has 30 days left on the job. His last assignment? Training his replacement, a reporter fresh out of journalism school. But Jack has other plans for his exit. He’s going out with a bang—a final story that just might win him the Pulitzer. Jack is focused on Alonzo Winslow, a 16-year-old drug dealer who’s in jail after confessing to the brutal rape and murder of one of his clients. Jack’s intention is to report how societal dysfunction and neglect created a teenage killer, but as he delves into the story, he realizes that Alonzo’s confession is bogus. Soon, Jack is running with his biggest story since the Poet crossed his path 12 years before. This time, he’s onto a killer who has worked completely below police and FBI radar. His investigation reunites him with FBI Agent Rachel Walling and leads them both into the digital world of data-collection services, where server farms are watched over by techs who liken themselves to scarecrows—keeping the birds of prey off their clients’ data. But Jack inadvertently sets off a digital tripwire and the killer—the Scarecrow—now knows he’s coming.

Hardcover: 432 pages

Publisher: Hachette Book Group Usa ( May 26, 2009 )

Item #: 97-8448

ISBN: 9780316166300

Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.25 x 1.003 inches

Product Weight: 16.0 ounces

Good Read
November 19, 2009

This book really dealt with problems facing many of us- loss of long-time employment and technological advances that include snooping on us. The tools we rely on can also track us-a scary thought. I really regret the demise of newspapers that this book so knowingly chronicles. This book really keeps you reading.

Reviewer: Susan J

Get With It People!
November 15, 2009

Fascinating read; holds your attention from page 1! As for 'geek-speak' -- get with the times, will you? I'm 60 a yo woman and worked in the computer field from its inception until a few years ago -- and I have kept up with the technology since I retired. It's the Technological Age and if you don't understand it, LEARN. If you don't want to read books about it, everything you need to know is online somewhere. Find it and expand your mind. Maybe you want to leave the world to the twenty-somethings, but I surely do not! Mental exercise keeps you young; engage in it!

Reviewer: Daywalker1701

Four out of five ain't bad
October 05, 2009

Okay, maybe giving this book 4 stars is a just a bit of a stretch, because it's certainly not his best. But I enjoyed it because of all the plot twists and pretty much constant action. What makes it a bit tedious and irritating is the heavy use of "geek speak" and tech terms that may only be familiar to readers a third of my age because they constantly live in the land of tech, spending all their time tweeting and such. But do those "kids" buy Connelly's books? I'd guess not much, so the author would be wise to remember his buying audience is mostly beyond the valley of the twenty-somethings and go back to writing in plain English. Bottomline: worth the read!

Reviewer: D. F

Good Book
October 05, 2009

I enjoyed this book. I really can appreciate Jack McEvoy's position, I am also losing my job after 29 years of service. I thought the story was entertaining and well written.

Reviewer: Ruth

Not Bad
September 25, 2009

This was not a bad book, but not the best, either. Jack McEnvoy is ok but I still miss Harry Bosch. The plot is fairly complicated and assumes that the reader has gone to MIT and majored in computer sciences. I bet 95% of folks did not have a glue about all that computer mumbo-jumbo. Well, at least I did not. It is still a good read if you don't think too hard. The plot has some holes but as I said, let it go and enjoy the rest.

Reviewer: Marie

06Z
13307200910ADFL