Fair Warning (Jack McEvoy, 3)

Veteran reporter Jack McEvoy has taken down killers before, but when a woman he had a one-night stand with is murdered in a particularly brutal way, McEvoy realizes he might be facing a criminal mind unlike any he's ever encountered.
Jack investigates--against the warnings of the police and his own editor--and makes a shocking discovery that connects the crime to other mysterious deaths across the country. Undetected by law enforcement, a vicious killer has been hunting women, using genetic data to select and stalk his targets.
Uncovering the murkiest corners of the dark web, Jack races to find and protect the last source who can lead him to his quarry. But the killer has already chosen his next target, and he's ready to strike.
Terrifying and unputdownable, Fair Warning shows once again why "Michael Connelly has earned his place in the pantheon of great crime fiction writers" (Chicago Sun-Times).
A Kirkus Best Book of 2020
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Community Reviews
In Fair Warning, Jack has been forced to reimagine his own career as an investigative reporter. The book's title comes from the consumer watchdog internet news site where he has been employed for four years. A far cry from the massive Los Angeles Times, where Jack was previously a crime reporter, FairWarning is just a five-person organization. The site displays a donate button prominently on the page of every news story, and the editor, Myron Levin, spends most of his time seeking donors and placing stories as co-projects with bigger news organizations.
Jack is justifiably dismayed by the current attacks on his profession, but knows that Myron is "undaunted, unprejudiced, and therefore [will] not be intimidated." So even though Jack has been forced to downside his lifestyle -- incoming royalties from his books have slowed to a trickle and his salary at FairWarning is a fraction of what he once earned -- he knows "for the first time in a long time" that he is in "the right place."
In Fair Warning, finding the truth is particularly personal to Jack because he finds himself a person of interest in a murder investigation. As the story opens, a woman with whom he had a one-night stand a year ago is brutally murdered. When the police link her to Jack and two ambitious LAPD detectives pay him a visit, he learns the cause of death was internal decapitation. Shortly before her death, the victim confided to her best friend that she felt she was being digitally stalked, claiming a man she met in a bar seemed to know things about her he should not have known. Jack is intrigued not only because of his encounter with the decedent, but the unusual way in which she died. His research leads him to a an online forum for coroners and medical examiners where he learns that atlanto-occipital dislocation (AOD or internal decapitation) is a rare form of death, but there have been a few other unsolved cases in various U.S. locations. He also delves into the issue of cyberstalking, and reaches out to the friend to whom the dead woman divulged her discomfort about how much a supposed stranger seemed to know about her.
Jack quickly finds himself immersed in the investigation and trying to convince Myron that the story actually fits into FairWarning's stated mission. He discovers a commonality among the women who died as a result of AOD: each of them provided a sample to a company called GT23, a low-budget alternative providing DNA analysis in exchange for agreeing that samples submitted may be sold to and used anonymously by research facilities and biotech firms. Jack's research reveals that there is "virtually no government oversight and regulation in the burgeoning field of genetic analytics. . . . And that was a news story."
Connelly lays out the steps Jack takes to investigate the case via his first-person narration. As he relentlessly and meticulously follows the clues he uncovers, Jack realizes that he is on the trail of a story that has his "blood moving with an addictive momentum." It's a feeling he hasn't known for quite some time, and it's "good to have that feeling back." Connelly also includes third-person descriptions of the movements of Hammond, an unscrupulous lab technician, and a killer who calls himself the Shrike, a moniker adopted because a shrike is a bird that silently stalks and attacks from behind. The shrike grips its victim's head in its beak and snaps it viciously.
No one writes a better police procedural novel than Connelly, and he brings that same deft timing of revelations and taut story construction to Fair Warning, along with an intimate look at Jack's frustrations and emotional journey. Now fifty-eight years old, Jack has remained single since he and Rachel Walling last broke up. The former FBI agent now operates RAW Data Services, providing background investigations to various businesses and organizations. It's not what she wants to be doing -- she loved being an FBI agent, but that career came to an abrupt end in a prior installment of the McEvoy series. Now she and Jack haven't seen each other for at least a year, but Jack seeks her advice and assistance with his investigation. Connelly tenderly and believably portrays their complicated history, and the seemingly insurmountable barriers to their relationship's success. It is an excrutiatingly heartbreaking story, and intriguing accompaniment to the murder mystery. Rachel told Jack years earlier about her theory of romance: everyone has one special person out in the world who can "pierce their heart like a bullet." For Jack, Rachel's name is "on the bullet that pierced me." Can they make it work this time?
Fair Warning is a contemporary, cautionary story about the dangers of releasing private information pertaining to one's DNA into the hands of a commercial enterprise that may be controlled by persons with unethical, immoral interests. It's a compelling step-by-step exploration of the gritty work required of investigative journalists, especially on a complex case fraught with peril. It's also a timely commentary on the value and importance of dedicated, independent journalists who devote themselves to finding and publishing the truth so their informed audience members can make up their own minds about the issues confronting society.
In short, it's Connelly at his best. He delivers yet another gripping, compulsively readable, entertaining mystery that leaves readers wanting more stories involving Jack McEvoy.
Thanks to NetGalley for an Advance Reader's Copy of the book.
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