The Woods (2007) was Coben's fourteenth novel and it is an uninspiring title for a riveting page-turning book. Paul Copeland, Cope to his friends and colleagues, is a county prosecutor in
Professor Lucy Gold is troubled by an imaginative essay that
is handed in to her. Its writer is anonymous. The words conjure up events from
her past, a past she has striven to forget for twenty years.
Coben has employed first person and third person narrative
in the same novel before, and it works to good effect here too. We can
empathise with Cope while also glimpsing what’s going on outside his own purview.
When a homicide victim turns up with curious links to Cope, a number of well-buried secrets from Cope’s past start to break the surface. The writing is spare and slick, ensuring that you want to read on as twist follows twist. The woods are a metaphor for Cope’s journey into understanding. It’s about responsibility, and honesty and facing up to problems rather than running away. The past always has a knack of catching up, especially in Harlan Coben’s novels!
If this is your first Coben, you’ll enjoy it and come back
for more. If you’ve read his books before, you know what to expect and you may
just be one step ahead of the revelations as they pile up, but you’ll still
finish the book well satisfied.
No comments:
Post a Comment