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Cold in Hand (The Charlie Resnick Mysteries Book 11) Kindle Edition

4.3 out of 5 stars 381 ratings

“A welcome return for Nottingham Inspector Charlie Resnickwho’s been absent from novel-length crime-fighting since Last Rites.”—Kirkus Reviews
 
It’s Valentine’s Day, and a dispute between rival gangs leaves a teenage girl dead. Detective Inspector Charlie Resnick, nearing retirement, is hauled back to the front line to help deal with the fallout. But when the dead girl’s father seeks to lay the blame on Resnick’s partner, DI Lynn Kellogg, Resnick finds the line between the personal and the professional dangerously blurred. 
 
Meanwhile, the Serious and Organized Crime Agency starts to show a keen interest in one of Kellogg’s murder cases—a case the agency is convinced is linked to international gun running and people trafficking. Soon Kellogg is drawn into a web of deceit and betrayal that puts both her and Resnick in mortal danger. In 
Cold in Hand, John Harvey brings back “one of the most fully realized characters in modern crime fiction” in another heart-stopping procedural (Sue Grafton).
 
“The book is quite possibly Harvey’s most authoritative in years: visceral, engaged and, yes, unputdownable.”—
Independent
 
“It’s impossible not to greet the return of Resnick in this eleventh, coda-like, deeply melancholy novel with anything but celebration.”—
Booklist (starred review)
 
“Impassioned, at times heartbreaking . . . [
Cold in Hand] confirms Harvey as one of our most accomplished writers in any genre.”—Sunday Telegraph

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. In 10 novels over 10 years (1989–1998), Charlie Resnick, the jazz-loving police detective, made Nottingham's turf familiar to readers who never came within 1,000 miles of it. Now, after a supporting role in Ash & Bone (2005), an older Charlie on the cusp of retirement makes a welcome and brilliant return. A pair of murder investigations form a knotty tangle, reflecting nasty changes in Nottingham: the first a gang dispute resulting in a fatal shooting, the second the murder of an East European prostitute imported for the sex trade. The latter case collides with a separate inquiry mounted by the SOCA (Serious and Organized Crime Agency). As always, Harvey handles the police procedural aspects with easy competence. But the characterization shines brightest as the thoroughly decent, competent Charlie navigates the treacherous waters of his profession that threaten to swamp his personal life. (Sept.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Bookmarks Magazine

John Harvey has developed a formidable reputation over the years for delivering some of the best police procedural novels in Britain. Cold in Hand continues that legacy as Harvey brings back beloved detective Charles Resnick and once again paints a realistic portrait of the bleak situation facing Britain's police departments—not to mention its cities—today. The author's talent fortunately extends beyond a mere familiarity with the crime world and into his carefully crafted characters. Harvey's understated prose and sensibility do wonders to show readers what Resnick and Kellogg experience as they traverse this dystopian vision of Nottingham. Cold in Hand, a heartbreaking portrait of contemporary English affairs, will rivet readers until the end.
Copyright 2008 Bookmarks Publishing LLC

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B003K16Q22
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Houghton Mifflin Harcourt; First edition (September 15, 2008)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ September 15, 2008
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 3.2 MB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 385 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.3 out of 5 stars 381 ratings

About the author

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John Harvey
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JOHN HARVEY is the author of eleven Charlie Resnick novels and the Frank Elder series, and is a recipient of the Silver Dagger Award, the Barry Award, and the Cartier Diamond Dagger Award for lifetime achievement, among other honors.

Customer reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
381 global ratings

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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on November 23, 2016
    Ah the 11th of the Charlie Resnick series. We find Charlie happily involved with live-in partner DI Lynn Kellogg. Lynn becomes involved in a shooting incident between youths. A young girl is killed and Lynn is shot.

    Charlie gets pulled into the investigation of the girl's murder. Meanwhile, the girl's father loudly blames Lynn for the death of his daughter. Lynn then gets involved in investigating the murder of a woman and her daughter. This leads her to some bad Serbian criminals, but before she can pin it on anyone, something devastating happens.

    This is a very good book. Well written, edited and steady paced, we are entranced with following these cases.

    I am very much looking forward to reading the 12th - and last - Charlie Resnick book
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on September 13, 2008
    Detective Inspector Charlie Resnick returns in Harvey's new thriller, albeit perhaps a more domesticated man, having entered a satisfying relationship Detective Inspector of the Homicide Unit and Hostage Negotiator Lynn Kellogg. With his favorite blues and jazz playing in the background, Resnick and Kellogg have reached a comfortable accommodation with their work and their private lives. Charlie, nearing his thirty and retirement, isn't questioning his good fortune in attracting the younger Kellogg, as bright an effective in her chosen career as the more seasoned detective. Intervening in a knife fight between two teenagers in a gang-infested Nottingham neighborhood, Kellogg is involved in an unfortunate incident: a gun is discharged, hitting Kellogg and another victim. Since English officers don't usually carry firearms, the situation is particularly ominous, leading to concerns of an infusion of illegal weapons into the city, a city already compromised by poverty, unemployment and rampant drug abuse.

    Indeed, through the complicated plotting of a skillful author, the unlikely connections between petty street crime and drug use yields more frightening connotations- the rising influence of the Eastern European mob, Nottingham a seething cauldron of illegal activities and the threat of mob control. The city suffers as well from international gun running, human trafficking and a tidal wave of illegal drugs that have overwhelmed agencies, police facing enormous challenges in every arena. While Charlie is assigned to the neighborhood shooting, Lynn recovers, thanks to her bullet-proof vest, returning to one of her own troubling cases, protecting a fragile witness in a gruesome murder, the mob threatening to annihilate or terrify any potential witnesses. Focusing on her witness, Lynn is frustrated by the interference of SOCA, the Serious and Organized Crime Agency, that seeks to swallow her case with their broad-based, arguably more high-impact investigation.

    These two characters, the very sympathetic Resnick and Kellogg, illustrate the difficulties of modern police work, the seasoned, dedicated investigative style of a veteran cop and the younger face of the agency, a capable, likeable woman whose skills reach beyond the common wisdom of the old fraternity. That they do so with such grace and efficiency adds to the pleasure of this novel, in spite of the real world problems that flood the pages. And there are other challenges: the diminishing of small cases in favor of the high-profile, headline-grabbing busts that allow the police to celebrate their few triumphs against accelerating crime, the neighborhood tensions and racial inequities that beleaguer even the most dedicated departments, an influx of illegal weapons, human trafficking and rampant drug abuse. All of this is daunting; Kellogg and Resnick are tested on every level, personal and career. In a thoughtful, troubling novel, Harvey delves into the very heart of city police work, frustrated, occasionally hopeful and tempered by the human condition. Luan Gaines/ 2008.
    6 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on March 11, 2015
    I love Charlie Resnick and was so sad that he may be retiring. This was a very mournful episode. I wish the series would never end.
  • Reviewed in the United States on March 9, 2013
    A GREAT READ ON A WET AND COLD DAY. I LOVE CHARLIE RESNICK AND ANYONE WHO STICKS WITH THE SERIES WILL LOVE HIM, TOO. HOPEFULLY, THIS IS NOT THE LAST.
  • Reviewed in the United States on October 16, 2008
    I had previously read and enjoyed the Charlie Resnik series by John Harvey and own all the books in hardback. I thought the series was over. Thus I was very happy to see a new entry after many years. In a series, I feel the author and the readers have a certain understanding. Events that might be OK in a stand-alone novel may violate the trust a loyal follower has in a series. Traumatic events early in a series such as the death of Joanna Brady's trooper husband in the J.A. Jance series may be a necessary prequel to future developments; that is not so for a mature series such as this. The gratuitous violence in the present book was not necessary for the plot in any way. It did not contribute clues to the solving of any of the crimes to be solved. Given the age of the main character, it seems unlikely that future plot lines required this development. Therefore, I feel my trust in this author has been misplaced. I did not expect a detective "cozy" when I bought this book, The Resnik novels have been gritty and tough. But I think John Harvey went out of his way to disappoint his loyal readers. Perhaps Mr. Harvey's current views are those of one of the peripheral detectives in the current book who sees hopeless, meaningless ever-increasing crime and violence everywhere. I won't be purchasing his next book lest someone break into Resnik's house and torture all his cats to death.
    6 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on October 6, 2012
    This book was one of the best, I had Trouble putting this down, each page kept me wanting more. The end will surprise you.

Top reviews from other countries

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  • Abhishek Kumar
    3.0 out of 5 stars A predictable read.
    Reviewed in India on January 22, 2021
    This is the second book that I have read from the author and my expectations were high after reading his first book but I was disappointed to say the least. Furthermore I will pass his other work in the future.
  • Elisabeth Bee
    5.0 out of 5 stars Très intéressant
    Reviewed in France on October 2, 2016
    J'ai lu les volumes de la série Resnick précédents, de 1 à 10, et je recommande vraiment cette série. Ce n'est pas que du simple polar, ni un suspense pour connaître le meurtrier ; c'est bien plus : un portrait extrêmement bien brossé et critique de la société anglaise, plus particulièrement de son côté sombre. J'ai vraiment aimé cet épisode, très poignant, où l'on découvre un Resnick qui évolue au gré des aléas de la vie (mais toujours fan absolu de jazz, et très connaisseur en la matière - vous pouvez suivre ses goûts si vous aimez ou si vous voulez découvrir le jazz). Une réflexion sur le pardon suivra sans doute votre lecture. John Harvey est un écrivain brillant, très observateur, très proche de notre quotidien. Je le compare à d'autres auteurs du genre comme Dennis Lehane, Jim Thompson, Pete Dexter, John Grisham, Adrian Mc Kinty ou Didier Daeninck, qui eux aussi nous informent, nous alertent, et nous rendent plus humains et plus intelligents. Bravo et merci à tous ces écrivains !
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  • nikki copleston
    5.0 out of 5 stars The Penultimate Charlie Resnick - John Harvey doesn't disappoint
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 31, 2015
    The Penultimate Resnick!
    I have loved John Harvey's D.I. Charlie Resnick since first discovering him in the early 1990s, not long after I'd embarked on my own quest to be a crime writer. Although Harvey has skilfully found excuses to introduce Resnick, his middle-aged, baggy-as-a-teddy-bear detective inspector, into other series, the main 12-book sequence 'starring' Resnick has seen him come head-to-head with the very worst that Nottingham's mean streets can throw at him. Resnick is of Polish extraction, loves his food, his Scotch, his jazz (especially his jazz). He's no softie, although he's sympathetic, a man with a moral compass all his own. For the last however many years, he's had Lynn Kellogg, rescued her from kidnappers, supported her through family traumas, stuck by her despite her promotion beyond his level. Now retirement - heaven forbid - is staring him in the face, and both he and Lynn know he's not suited for it.
    Caught up in an altercation between two girls, Lynn is hurt and one of the girls is killed. The dead girl's father blames Lynn, who gets immersed in a different case, involving corruption, international arms smuggling and sex trafficking. Who can she trust to help her?
    As ever, Harvey threads the cases together, linking London and Nottingham forces, painting rapid but vivid portraits of the main protagonists. His ear for dialogue is unrivalled - though I did find some of his black characters' speech and mannerisms a tad formulaic and predictable, innit? Which isn't to say Harvey treats his black characters in a patronizing way, just that he is so intent on bringing them to life, he teeters on the brink of overdoing it, as if his readers can't use their imaginations.
    I did enjoy this book - what John Harvey book haven't I enjoyed??!! - but its bitter-sweetness reminded me that there's only one more book left to read in this sequence.
    I shall pick up Book 12 with a heavy heart...!
  • Kirstine
    4.0 out of 5 stars Gripping and gritty story
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 8, 2008
    If you like realistic, sometimes brutal crime detective stories you'll like this book. A multi-stranded story and a cast of well-rounded characters keeps you gripped to the end. Personally, I find all the stuff about Resnick's taste in jazz music a bit boring as I don't know anything about that genre. Nevertheless, I like John Harvey's writing and always buy his latest book.
  • jpc
    4.0 out of 5 stars Un Resnick de plus
    Reviewed in France on April 20, 2014
    De très bon polar anglais avec l'atmosphère de l'Angleterre désindustrialisé. On pourrait se passer des romances de l'inspecteur, mais pas de ces chats.

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