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The Chopping Block

di John Passarella

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523495,780 (3.38)1
A cache of bones is found in a shallow grave in local woods... Meanwhile missing persons cases in Portland seem to be on the increase. As more bones are discovered, Portland homicide Detective Nick Burkhardt and his partner Hank Griffin investigate - but there seems to be no connection between the victims... A brand-new original story set in the Grimm universe.… (altro)
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Ye gads, this book took a while to get through. I'm not big on real horror, so reading about the subject matter in this book (in brutal detail ) having someone describe in rather accurate terms the dismemberment and gutting of a human body was more than I was expecting for this book - though appropriate for the subject matter was not a fun thing to do and I don't recommend trying to read it while eating either. ( )
  fuzzipueo | Apr 24, 2022 |
I enjoyed this one a lot more than the first book in the series by John Shirley.
Passarella has a much better grip on all the characters, the book is clearly set at a specific point of the show, and the case, while exceptional brutal even for Grimm standards, was also fitting. And even though he didn't include Juliette and Rosalee in the action, at least he didn't ignore them completely. ( )
  Sue_Z | Mar 22, 2022 |
In the middle of a case of Wesen-induced zombies, Nick and Hank have another case to follow. Human bones have been found – chopped up human bones. Investigation quickly reveals more and more bodies quickly piling up and a disturbing fact…

The bones have been boiled.

Many disturbing scenarios occur to the investigators are they become more convinced that the perpetrator is a Wesen – but there are many false leads to track down and as the full horror of what is happening becomes apparent, more and more bodies pile up

When I read a book of a TV series, I’m always a little worried about how it will be written – worries that are wonderfully displayed by this book.

There is nothing wrong with how Nick is portrayed. His thought processes, his behaviour, his opinions are all perfectly consistent with how Nick could act or could think. The problem is that, after watching 3 seasons of the show, I’ve already formed my own thoughts about how Nick thinks – and they don’t mesh. Of course, this is one person’s headcannon against another’s – but there are things like Nick automatically considering Wesen when he’s confronted with a crime scene when I imagined he’d do the opposite, or when he has extremely long internal musings or monologues that has part of me yelling “nooo, Nick wouldn’t do that!” For entirely spurious reasons of course.

I explain this first to say how there was something of a disconnect between me and the characters – I also found other problems with the conversion. I think there was too much of a desperate need to shout out to the series as often as possible, referring to past episodes, referring to the Grimm episodes that were supposed to be happening at the same time as this book, name dropping as many Wesen as possible etc. There was too much homage. And too much recapping – so many details that readers who have already seen the show already know, but not nearly enough for someone brand new to the show to be able to pick it up.

Which leads me to my next problem – the research. I am impressed – I am in awe – of the sheer amount of research the author has put into this book. But it’s too much – I don’t need to know the intricacies of veterinary medicine from Juliette, I don’t need to know the kind of gun everyone uses – or the brand of taser. It’s ok for a character to go back to their car without you telling me what that car is. A whole lot of work went into this book but I’m not sure how much it was relevant.

On the relevance – Hank and Juliette’s POV were both… questionable. I actually really liked Juliette’s headspace, her diagnosing her doggy patients, her working hard to find a cure; it showed her work, how it mattered and what it meant to her. It was really well written, really well done, I enjoyed it – and it was utterly irrelevant to anything else in the book. I appreciate the desire not to consign Juliette to the plot box but her story felt out of place.

And Hank? Nothing wrong with his head space per se – but he’s on crutches at this point in the series. And they’re mentioned – a lot. And while it’s nice to have a nod to the difficulties faced by someone on crutches especially on uneven terrain, this is kind of the entirety of Hank’s role in the book. He hobbles around on crutches while mentioning how difficult it is to hobble around on crutches and he hates being babied by people who assume he’s helpless on crutches and how annoying crutches are and, did we mention the crutches? Because crutches. Crutches crutches… I wonder if this is partly the fault of the show for not giving Hank much personal life, interests or connections outside of Nick so leaving the author very little to fall back on.

Monroe’s POV was excellent, however. He has a wonderful portrayal of him fighting against his instincts as a Blutbad, trying to help someone else leave the life but at the same time feeling their influence and struggles as triggers for his own struggle and long buried instincts. There are parallels with addiction – but it’s generally very well done, very realistically research and very reasonably compared. The flip side is that the underlying “addiction” he’s fighting is literally rampaging murder – or apparently so – which has a demonising element.

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  FangsfortheFantasy | Mar 9, 2014 |
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A cache of bones is found in a shallow grave in local woods... Meanwhile missing persons cases in Portland seem to be on the increase. As more bones are discovered, Portland homicide Detective Nick Burkhardt and his partner Hank Griffin investigate - but there seems to be no connection between the victims... A brand-new original story set in the Grimm universe.

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