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Hades di Candice Fox
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Hades (originale 2014; edizione 2014)

di Candice Fox

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
22425120,481 (3.77)3
Fiction. Mystery. HTML:

"Compelling . . . A chilling read." --Sydney Morning Herald

Twenty years ago, two children were kidnapped and left for dead.
Raised by a master criminal, they grew up to become cops. Very unusual cops . . .

Homicide detective Frank Bennett has an intriguing new partner. Dark, beautiful, coldly efficient, Eden Archer is one of the most enigmatic colleagues Frank has ever worked with--that includes her brother Eric, who's also on the Sydney Metro police force. All of them are tested to the core when a local man discovers a graveyard of large steel toolboxes lying at the bottom of the harbor. Each box contains a grisly trove of human body parts.

For Frank, the madman's clues are a tantalizing puzzle. For Eden and Eric, the case holds chilling links to a scarred childhood--and a murderous mentor named Hades. But the true evil goes beyond the bloody handiwork of a serial killer...

.
… (altro)
Utente:davlap
Titolo:Hades
Autori:Candice Fox
Info:North Sydney, NSW : Random House Australia, 2014.
Collezioni:read, nothanks, to-find, La tua biblioteca, In lettura, Da leggere, Letti ma non posseduti, Preferiti
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Etichette:Nessuno

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Hades di Candice Fox (2014)

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Twenty years ago, two children brother & sister, were kidnapped (after their millionaire parents' were shot in front of them) and left for dead, dumped at Hades', (a criminal) trash yard. Hades gets rid of evidence (dead bodies) for a fee. Realizing that he could not kill the two very young children, he named them Eden & Eric and raised them to survive. Eden & Eric grew up to become cops. Very unusual cops’ hell bent on revenge.
Homicide detective Frank Bennett has an intriguing new partner. Dark, beautiful, coldly efficient, Eden Archer is one of the most enigmatic colleagues Frank has ever worked with—that includes her brother Eric, who is also on the Sydney Metro police force. All of them are tested to the core when a local man discovers a graveyard of large steel toolboxes lying at the bottom of the harbor. Each box contains a grisly trove of human body parts. For Frank, the madman’s clues are a tantalizing puzzle. For Eden and Eric, the case holds chilling links to a scarred childhood—and a murderous mentor named Hades. However, the true evil goes beyond the bloody handiwork of a serial killer… ( )
  rata | Apr 6, 2024 |
I love to travel to places that are familiar enough that I don't feel overwhelmed by strangeness but different enough that all my senses come alive, processing the unexpected, delighting in the new, and warily assessing the weird. Reading Hades was like that kind of travel.

It's a police procedural novel told from the point of view of a new-to-this-department Homicide Detective working with his new partner to catch a serial killer. I know that kind of book. I've read lots of them. I take them in my stride. But... Hades only looks like that kind of book. It's actually something fascinatingly different. Something dark and dangerous hidden in plain sight by my own expectations. Something that, once I spotted it, I had to understand.

I met the man called Hades on the first page of a Prologue that I knew had to be linked to the serial killer narrative that the publisher's summary had told me of but I didn't know how. I did know that I was already somewhere different and dark. Here's the first paragraph:

"As soon as the stranger set the bundle on the floor, Hades could tell it was the body of a child. It was curled on its side and wrapped in a worn blue sheet secured with duct tape around the neck, waist and knees. One tiny pearl-coloured foot poked out from the hem, limp on his sticky linoleum. Hades leaned against the counter of his cramped, cluttered kitchen and stared at that little foot. The stranger shifted uneasily in the doorway, drew a cigarette from a packet and pulled out some matches. The man they called Hades lifted his eyes briefly to the stranger’s thin angled face."

Hades already felt threatening I wanted to know who the child was and whether it lived and what the man expected Hades to do with it. I found out all of those things in the next couple of pages and each one of them surprised and sank like a barb into my imagination. I wanted to know more.

So, of course, Chapter One has no obvious connection to the Prologue and I have to reorient myself. Now, I'm in police procedural land, looking through the eyes of a cop at his new partner. Here are the first two paragraphs:

"I figured I'd struck it lucky when I first laid eyes on Eden Archer. She was sitting by the window with her back to me. I could just see a slice of her angular face when she surveyed the circle of men around her. It seemed to be some kind of counselling session, probably about the man I was replacing, Eden’s late partner. Some of the men in the circle were grey-faced and sullen, like they were only just keeping their emotions in check. The psychologist himself looked as if someone had just stolen his last zack.

Eden, on the other hand, was quietly contemplative. She had a flick-blade in her right hand, visible only to me, and she was sliding it open and shut with her thumb. I ran my eyes over her long black braid and licked my teeth. I knew her type, had encountered plenty in the academy. No friends, no interest in having a mess around in the male dorms on quiet weekends when the officers were away. She could run in those three-inch heels, no doubt about that. The forty-dollar manicure was her third this month but she would break a rat’s neck if she found it in her pantry. I liked the look of her. I liked the way she breathed, slow and calm, while the officers around her tried not to fall to pieces."

I know at once that I don't like the guy whose eyes I'm looking through. Part of me wonders at having moved from Hades to Eden, no writer would let that be a coincidence, but I can't see a connection yet. Still, I'm just few pages in and I already know that I don't know what's going on, that there people aren't who I was expecting and that this is going to shape up into an excellent read.

Hades, it turned out, was a book that declined to follow genre norms. It cut its own bloody and surprising path to resolution. It was the first book I'd read where the Homicide Detectives seemed to be the dangerous ones. At first, I thought it was just Frank Bennett, the newbie through whose eyes I saw Eden Archer for the first time. He's a piece of work. A violent angry man who takes drugs and beats his wife. Yet he's eclipsed in the strange and dangerous stakes by his partner and her twin brother, Eric, who is also a Homicide Detective and is instantly recognisable as a charismatic psychopath. Given that the police are supposed to be the good guys, you can imagine how bad the serial killer was.

Hades is told on two timelines, a Now one seen through Bennett's eyes as he and Eden hunt the serial killer, and a Then one that follows what Hades did after the Prologue. I enjoyed the dual timeline and dual point-of-view storytelling and admired how well the narrative structure maintained the tension while developing the characters.

I ended the book deeply satisfied by my visit with Eden Archer. I was surprised when I found out that Hades was Candice Fox's debut novel but I wasn't surprised that it won the Ned Kelly Award for Best First Fiction (2014). Eden,

I'm keen to read the next two books in the trilogy: Eden which won the Ned Kelly Award for Best Fiction (2015) and Fall. ( )
  MikeFinnFiction | Nov 8, 2023 |
Living in Sydney, Australia Hades is the fixer, if you have a problem then he is the one to go to. Then a kidnapping goes wrong and the lives of two children are changed forever.
Some twenty years later homicide detective Frank Bennett meets his new partner Eden Archer, and her brother Eric.
Their first case together is an attempted drowning, until the victim relates what he has seen.
A very enjoyable well-written story and a great start to a new series.
( )
  Vesper1931 | Jul 29, 2021 |
I've been aware of author Candice Fox for awhile now, but had never read one of her books. When a fellow reader mentioned this series of books featuring Sydney, Australia, homicide detectives Eden Archer and Frank Bennett, I decided to try it out with this first book. I enjoy reading Australian crime fiction, and although there isn't much Aussie flavor to Fox's story, the occasional mention of frangipani trees and flying foxes napping in fig trees were enough to transport my mind's eye to the land down under.

What Fox really excelled in as far as Hades' setting goes is her chilling descriptions of two of the serial killer's body dump sites. Although neither graphic nor gruesome, those descriptions made my blood run cold. I really love it when writers can make me break out in goosebumps without drowning scenes in buckets of gore.

It took me a long time to warm up to Frank Bennett, the man who tells us what's going on. He's needy. He becomes fascinated with Eden, originally because she's so pretty (yawn) but then the fascination grows when he realizes that there's something not quite right about Eden and her brother Eric. It took time, but I did warm up to Bennett finally when I learned about his relationship with an elderly man after chasing a burglar out of the man's house. That was the tipping point for me.

There were a couple of secondary characters whose deaths were inevitable, and I did find the serial killer (dubbed "The Body Snatcher" by the media) to be over the top and not really believable, but the linchpin of Hades is Eden Archer. When she was five, she and her brother were kidnapped, left for dead, and then raised by a fixer-- a killer for hire who "fixed" other criminals' problems. When Hades realizes what young Eden and Eric are doing in their spare time, he ensures that the two will use their skills only for good, and in this, it's impossible not to compare Eden Archer to Jeff Lindsay's Dexter. This comparison has everything to do with my reaction to this book.

I read the first Dexter Morgan book, Darkly Dreaming Dexter, and appreciated the author's originality and writing style. I thought it was a well-written, absorbing book. But. (You knew that was coming, didn't you?) I never read another book in the series. There's something about someone taking the law into his or her own hands that offends me even when the person is taking vicious criminals off the streets permanently. Consequently, I have the same problem with Eden Archer, and although I did find the story compelling, I'm satisfied with reading just one. The good news is that I have the first book in Candice Fox's other series waiting to be read. I look forward to Crimson Lake because one thing I know for sure is that I like the way this author writes. ( )
  cathyskye | Sep 11, 2020 |
An Australian thriller about a serial killer with an orginal plot involving black market organ donations. ( )
  lewilliams | Apr 10, 2017 |
Criminal profilers for the FBI have estimated that there are as many as fifty serial killers at any one time currently in the USA. Considering that the population is smaller, you wouldn’t think that there are nearly as many in Australia, but in Hades, Candice Fox’s first novel, there are a bunch.

Heinrich “Hades “Archer is a criminal fixer, who owns a garbage dump that he occasionally allows people to use to dispose of bodies. A group of brutal but bumbling would-be kidnappers show up looking to dispose of the corpses of two children, the only family left after a botched job. Hades kills the criminal, and discovers that the children, a brother and sister, Eric and Eden, are still alive. Not knowing what else to do, he takes them in and raises them as his own. The ordeal that they suffered however scars them, and they show signs of becoming serial killers themselves. Hades trains them in all of the things that they need to know, insists that they limit their crimes to the guilty, and gets them jobs with the police.

Years later Detective Frank Bennett starts working with Eden after the death of her former partner. Their first case is tracking down a serial killer who harvests organs, and not only for the money. From there the book turns into a series of parallel investigations, as Frank finds himself investigating Eric and Eden, the death of her former partner, and finding himself in a surprising relationship with Martina, a gutsy witness who managed to escape from the killer. By the time the tale really starts to take off Frank has so many many plates spinning at once that I got dizzy.

Ms. Fox provides all the twists and turns you could possibly want, and she does it with great style. All of the characters are unique and finely drawn, if often unpleasant. Martina will break your heart, and Eden is just phenomenal. This is a twisted story, dark, bloody and original. It’s strong stuff, and Ms. Cox does a bravura job of pulling it off. The tension grows and grows, and Ms. Cox doesn’t flinch for a second. Not once does she take her foot off of the stories throat, and by the last few chapters I found myself having to hold back to savor the details instead of just flying to the end. All in all, Hades is a startling, compelling, and very dark ride.

Review by: Mark Palm
Full Reviews Available at: http://www.thebookendfamily.weebly.co...
 

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Fiction. Mystery. HTML:

"Compelling . . . A chilling read." --Sydney Morning Herald

Twenty years ago, two children were kidnapped and left for dead.
Raised by a master criminal, they grew up to become cops. Very unusual cops . . .

Homicide detective Frank Bennett has an intriguing new partner. Dark, beautiful, coldly efficient, Eden Archer is one of the most enigmatic colleagues Frank has ever worked with--that includes her brother Eric, who's also on the Sydney Metro police force. All of them are tested to the core when a local man discovers a graveyard of large steel toolboxes lying at the bottom of the harbor. Each box contains a grisly trove of human body parts.

For Frank, the madman's clues are a tantalizing puzzle. For Eden and Eric, the case holds chilling links to a scarred childhood--and a murderous mentor named Hades. But the true evil goes beyond the bloody handiwork of a serial killer...

.

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