Synopses & Reviews
Riveting suspense in the tradition of Dennis Lehane and Michael Connelly, City of the Sun
introduces retired detective Frank Behran imposing, charismatic former cop who agrees to take the case of a boy whos been missing for over a year.Jamie Gabriel gets on his bike before dawn to deliver newspapers in his suburban Indianapolis neighborhood. He is twelve years old. Somewhere en route, as the October sky lightens, he vanishes without a trace.
Fourteen months later, Paul and Carol Gabriel are on the verge of abandoning all hope. Crushed by frustrating dead ends and exhausted by a police force that cannot (or will not) find their son, the Gabriels finally find a ray of hope: the name of an elusive private investigator who may represent their last chance.
Frank Behr is an enigmatic mountain of a man, a former cop who wants to helpbut knows better than to give the Gabriels any hope of a happy ending. He has worked this kind of case too often. But Pauls plea stirs up old personal demons that Behr can no longer ignore. Going against everything he fears, Behr enters into an uneasy partnership with Paul on a quest for the truth that is, in turn, dangerous … and haunting.
Richly textured and crackling with suspense on every page, City of the Sun weaves a moody narrative that hinges on the bond between a damaged detective and a lost father. From the antiseptic comforts of suburban Indianapolis to the citys seamy underworld, David Levien introduces a private investigator as complex, idiosyncratic, and sympathetic as any in modern crime fiction. Levien is a gifted storyteller who will keep readers guessing right up until the final, explosive scene.
Synopsis
Somewhere along his paper route, Jamie Gabriel vanishes without a trace. Fourteen months later, his parents are on the verge of abandoning hope, when they discover private investigator Frank Behr, who begins an unrelenting quest for answers.
About the Author
DAVID LEVIEN wrote the screenplays for Ocean’s 13, Runaway Jury, Walking Tall, Rounders, and several other major films with writing partner Brian Koppelman. He lives in New York City.