He did not force the door open. He was in no hurry.
When Amos Decker returned home to find the bodies of his wife and only daughter, he didn't think he could carry on living.
Overwhelmed with grief, Decker saw his life fall apart, losing his job as a detective, his house, and his self-respect. But when his former partner visits to tell him that someone has confessed to the murder of his family, he knows he must seek justice for them.
Then tragedy strikes at the local school: teenagers are gunned down and the killer is at large. Following the serious brain injury Amos suffered as a professional footballer, he gained a remarkable gift - and the police believe that this unusual skill will assist in the hunt for the killer.
Amos Decker must endure the memories he would rather forget, and when new evidence links the murders, he is left with only one option...
David Baldacci has been writing since childhood, when his mother gave him a lined notebook in which to write down his stories. (Much later, when David thanked her for being the spark that ignited his writing career, she revealed that she’d given him the notebook to keep him quiet, "because every mom needs a break now and then.”)
David published his first novel, Absolute Power, in 1996; the feature film adaptation followed, with Clint Eastwood as its director and star. In total, David has published 52 novels for adults; all have been national and international bestsellers, and several have been adapted for film and television. David has also published seven novels for younger readers. His books are published in over 45 languages and in more than 80 countries, with over 200 million copies sold worldwide.
In addition to being a prolific writer, David is a devoted philanthropist, and his greatest efforts are dedicated to his family’s Wish You Well Foundation®. Established by David and his wife, Michelle, the Wish You Well Foundation supports family and adult literacy programs in the United States.
A lifelong Virginian, David is a graduate of Virginia Commonwealth University and the University of Virginia School of Law.
1 1/2 stars. What is extremely impressive about this book is how David Baldacci has managed to convince thousands of readers that this kind of shit is not only good, but something shiny and new.
First of all, Amos Decker is a *gasp* "memory man", meaning that an injury gave him the ability to never forget ANYTHING! You got that, right? He remembers everything he has experienced. Literally everything. Isn't that completely unique and never heard of before? So weird how no mystery/crime author has thought to do this!
Okay, I'll stop.
But the big selling point of this novel is a character who forgets nothing and, let's be honest, this is pretty common in the genre. Sherlock Holmes, one of the most famous fictional detectives of all time, has a photographic memory (slightly different from Decker's hyperthymesia, but mostly the same). The fact that this is pretty much the extent of Decker's characterization and it is somehow supposed to be shocking - well, that kind of fell flat instantly.
There are many things in this book that I suspect we are supposed to exclaim dramatically at and be impressed by, but we've either seen them before or they're flimsy at best. For example, Decker is supposed to be the absolute best at his job because of his memory, and yet rather than being wowed by him, I got the impression that everyone else in the book was dumbed down to make him look better. He would make a fairly obvious deduction and all the other agents' mouths would gape open in awe. Seriously, I could have told them that.
Backstory goes like this: Decker left the police after discovering his wife, daughter, and brother-in-law murdered in his home. The murderer was never caught. But he now finds himself pulled back into an investigation of a school shooting, because he is just so damn good that they need him on the case. Nobody else can figure this out. What's more, a guy called Sebastian Leopold confesses to his family's murder and gets taken in - but some things just don't add up.
The story is full of plot holes - the detectives ignore key pieces of evidence to prolong the mystery, instead looking into other dead ends. They mostly do nothing, anyway, and just stare googly-eyed at Decker, waiting for his instruction. As a reader of fairly average intelligence, I definitely don't like to feel I could conduct a murder investigation better than trained detectives. I did here.
Also, the "motive" did not make any sense to me. I do not think the reasons given in this book added up to the sum of the crimes at all. It seemed like Baldacci had a random idea for a crime and a random idea for a "reveal" and simply stuck the two together, even though they didn't fit. The answers to the mystery are kind of ludicrous, throwing more mess into an already convoluted plot.
I'd even go so far as to say the conclusions add some disturbing implications, and I don't mean in a good way.
The rating gets rounded up only because Baldacci knows how to keep you interested and turning the pages. His writing has a certain easy-to-digest charm that makes me think I should try his other books. This one, though, was clearly not a good place to start.
This was my first Baldacci book. I have several friends who recommend him highly - one specifically mentioned this book. I am nervous to go back and tell them I only gave it 3 stars!
It was an okay mystery and I stayed interested throughout. My problem is that I didn't believe any of the motivations of the characters. I know part of fiction is suspending your belief, but I need it to not seem completely unreasonable and unbelievable. I will put it to you this way: would you go and drop a nuclear bomb on the house of someone who bullied an acquaintance of yours in second grade? After reading this, I think Baldacci might!
Another thing that bugged me - and this is not an issue with the book itself - was the audio production. I have listened to some before where they switch readers during the book and they were fine. This one was a bit distracting and confusing. Also, every 15 minutes or so it would start playing background music. It was very strange! So, I can say I don't recommend this one on audio!
Anyone have any other good Baldacci recommendations?
First in the series that I read when it came out. Don't know how I missed doing a review. I liked this one a great deal, and highly recommend. Excellent premise and execution. The entire series is worth the look. The third one fell down a tad but I liked the fourth so I'm definitely in if he does another. The main character is nicely flawed and I was pulling for him throughout the book. He has unique talents that are utilized in the story to great effect. He isn't a rock um-sockum hero by any means. These stories are more cerebral (though a lot of bodies do hit the floor). David Putnam author of The Bruno Johnson series.
I can literally listen to Gucci gang and read this book at same time and I bet I will still be able to count how many times lil pump said Gucci gang and also what the fuck is happening in this book? Yes! This book was that boring and dull!!
I sort of expected this book to be neutral but it was below average and guess what i am not even surprised , I kinda thought it would be like this because from the start this book is compilation of murders and stupid detectives and police officers except Amos Decker ObViOusly !!!!
Plot points
Me :- hey Amos ! Shouldn't you be looking there? Amos :- no first we will fly all the way to Mars and talk to aliens whether they know something about it! Me:- but isn't it obvious you should be looking there! Amos:- yes exactly it's obvious! Me :- then why ? Amos :- because..... Talk to Mr. Baldacci. Hey have I seen you somewhere( Coz I remember EVERYTHING!) .................................... Characterisation
Me:- it will be interesting there are so many detectives , FBI agents and police officers to help our hero!
Meanwhile at a crime scene :-
Lancaster( police officer) :- what you think Amos? Bogard( FBI agent) :- so Amos ..... Captain miller ( head police officer) :- well Amos ..... Amos :- I know who did this? I am going to find him/her! Miller/bogard/Lancaster :- okay let's follow him coz he knows everything!
Me:- they were really helpful! .............................. Motive
Belinda and leopard making murder plans :-
Belinda :- listen leopard we are gonna bomb this school and kill students , then we will do some more random killing and then some more killing and then finally we will kill Amos !
Leopard :- cool ist very cool ! What should I do?
Belinda :- you will be in jail all the damn time ! And I will do the killing and you should act maniac !
Leopard :- okay but why are we killing these random people?
Belinda :- because people looking like them or belonging to sane profession as them , 2000 years back bullied me and I will kill them * evil laugh*
Leopard :- shouldn't we be killing actual people who bullied you?
Belinda :- yes but that will be boring !
Me:- this doesn't make sense!
Belinda :- you think only Amos remembers everything ! Me too bitch me too!
....................................
That was all this book about !
There is nothing redeeming about it . .its far fetched and tad unbelievable period !
My first ever David Baldacci book and what a good one it was! I sat and read it all in one day because it was basically unputdownable. The main character who is an ex cop is made extra interesting in that he is a savant and has the ability to remember everything. This of course is a great asset in a murder enquiry and by the end of the book our ex cop is looking forward to much greater things. This is marked as book one in a new series and I look forward to reading the next one. I also intend to make time to read a lot more of this author's books.
I couldn't wait to sludge through this redundant, murderous, sorrowful written drivel of muck. There is nothing redeeming. After the second time a gun is put to the head, I wanted to put one to my own for being sucked into this quagmire of crap. Despicable and awful. 0 of 10 stars!
There seems to be no shortage of the troubled hero who's family are brutally murdered in the worse way. Yes, these characters make for an interesting story... at first. It's no secret that this hero can often be redundant, boring, and overdone. David Baldacci attempts to break this mold by introducing us to Amos Decker with an unusual ability to remember everything. I mean EVERYTHING!
Memory Man begins with Decker, then a detective, stumbling upon the brutal, senseless murder of his brother-in-law, wife, and daughter. After this devastating time, Decker slowly tries to begin his life again as a private detective. Long gone are the days on the Burlington police force... that is until a man named Sebastian Leopold confesses to the murder of his family.
As if that isn't enough, there seems to be new murders and massacres that all point to having something to do with Amos Decker. There seems to be a cat and mouse game the the other players in this novel can't keep up with. Honestly, I couldn't keep up either. Memory Man is a fast moving title, but it also seemed a little too fast and under developed.
Before I get into what I didn't like about this novel, I will say that I consider myself a fan of David Baldacci although I've only read one other novel by him. I was especially excited to begin reading Memory Man. It begins in graphic detail of a heinous murder which is always a plus. It also provides insight into the mind of a man who has decided to choose between life and death after his world is taken away from him. For the first few chapters I was engrossed in Amos Decker's story.
Baldacci gave the tortured hero more depth than others. Sure, he's socially awkward, emotionally detached, and pretty much struggling to hold things together. What's remarkable about Amos is that after being a delivered a career-ending blow to the head in the NFL, he "suffers" from hyperthymesia. For those who wonder what that is here ya go: It's a near-perfect recall of one's personal or autobiographical past. Imagine never forgetting a thing that happens to you. Like Monk says, it's a gift and it's a curse.
Yes, Amos Decker is interesting but not interesting enough to ignore that the other characters in this novel, besides the maniac on the loose, are totally forgettable. They struggle to keep up with Decker and it's painfully obvious. While Decker deciphers clue after clue (yes I know they were intended for him), it is so annoying that no one else can provide much insight. They just seemed to be going along with the motions and following Decker's lead. Since it seems this is the beginning of another recurring series, I want more of a reason to continue to invest my time in this series. This novel did none of that. I expected way more from Baldacci.
In conclusion, I wasn't too impressed with Memory Man but it wasn't awful. I would definitely read more by David Baldacci but I need more from his characters in the next Amos Decker novels. I understand there was a need to lay down the foundation for this tortured soul, but... if memory serves me correctly, I know Baldacci has better in him.
Copy provided by Grand Central Publishing via Netgalley
Burlington police detective Amos Decker spiraled into despair when his wife, daughter, and brother-in-law were brutally murdered 15 months ago. He quit the police force and became homeless before moving into a cheap motel and becoming a private detective. Once a football player, the 6' 5", 350 pound Decker is seriously out of shape.
He has a unique ability, however, acquired after a massive hit ended his football career. Decker sustained a brain injury that gave him hyperthymesia - a complete, detailed memory of everything he's ever seen or experienced.
As the story opens Detective Mary Lancaster, Decker's old partner, tells him a homeless man named Sebastian Leopold has confessed to murdering Decker's family. Decker, posing as an attorney, manipulates his way into the jail to talk to Leopold.
The homeless man, who appears to have mental problems, claims he killed Decker's family because the detective dissed him at a 7-Eleven. Just when Decker is sneaking into the jail to speak to Leopold a mass shooting occurs at local Mansfield High School, killing a number of staff and students.
Because he was an excellent detective Decker is asked to consult with authorities on the Mansfield High School murders. He uses his extraordinary memory to help the cops and FBI search for the high school shooter and to look into Leopold's bogus-sounding confession. Decker uncovers one clue after another in the mass shooting case, which turns out to be an intricate plot that has a connection to the murder of Decker's family. Along the way Decker, a socially inept loner, has some hostile interactions with an FBI agent and a newspaper reporter who want his cooperation. Eventually, though, Decker manages to work with others on the investigations.
This is a well-written, engaging, fast-paced mystery that kept my attention as the actions and motives of the perpetrator were exposed. My biggest problem with the plot is that both Decker - and especially the FBI - seem too slow on the uptake in unraveling some of the clues. Without giving away any spoilers I'll just say that, in real life, the FBI would probably have exposed/understood some clues well before Decker had his 'aha moments'. This may be necessary for the story's plot but it doesn't ring true. Moreover, given the motive, I would have expected the perpetrator to do some things quite differently.
Still, the book kept my interest from beginning to end and I would read more books about detective Decker's exploits. I'd recommend Memory Man to mystery fans.
এই বইটার সাথে আমার অনেক স্মৃতি জড়িয়ে থাকবে সারাজীবন। এই বইটির ২০০ পেজ যখন পড়া শেষ তখন ২৯/১০/২০ তারিখ আমার আব্বু মৃত্যুবরণ করেন। আমার আব্বুর জন্য সবাই দোয়া করবেন। তারপর টানা ১০ দিন বই পড়া হয়নি আজকে শেষ করলাম। যাই হোক বিস্তারিত রিভিউ দেওয়ার মনমানসিকতা নেই তাও কিছু বলি।
বইটির প্রধান চরিত্রের নাম অ্যামোস ডেকার। অ্যামোস ডেকার পুলিশের ডিটেকটিভ একদিন হঠাৎ বাড়িতে এসে দেখে তার বউ, মেয়ে এবং শ্যালককে মার্ডার করা হয়েছে কিন্তু মার্ডারের সুনির্দিষ্ট কোন কারণ খুঁজে পাচ্ছিলো না। ডেকার একাকীত্বের বেদনা বইতে শুরু করলো চাকরি হারালো। ব্যাংক লোন শোধ না করতে পারার জন্য বাড়িও হারালো। অনেক বার সুইসাইড করতে যেয়েও করতে পারেনি। তারপর হঠাৎ একদিন একলোক এসে নিজে পুলিশের কাছে আত্মসমর্পণ করলো খুনের দায়ে। শুরু হলো গল্পের মোড় নেয়া কেনো নিজে ধরা দিলো কেনোই বা মার্ডার করলো এই জীর্নশীর্ণ শরীর নিয়ে কিভাবেই বা এতো গুলো মার্ডার করলো? বাদ বাকী জানতে হলে পড়ে ফেলতে হবে ডেভিড ব্যালডাচির মেমোরি ম্যান বইটি।
সত্যি বলতে বইটি পড়ে আমি প্রচন্ডভাবে উপভোগ করেছি। অত্যন্ত ভালো লাগার একটা ক্যারেক্টার পেলাম।
Hipertimesia es tener memoria total, acordarse de todo. Y eso tiene Decker, el prota de esta novela que es expolicía y exdetective y al que han asesinado a mujer e hija en circunstancias -como no- sin explicar.
El fulano pesa más de 150 kg, mide cerca de 2 metros y es casi un indigente.
Y con esos mimbres el señor Baldacci nos monta una novela de ritmo frenético en el que no se para un instante de recabar pistas y pruebas y de aparecer personajes secundarios necesarios para la trama.
Mira que a mí no me gustan los párrafos de reflexiones intimistas, pero es que aquí hasta echo de menos saber un poco más de los personajes en vez de tanta acción.
El personaje es raro, cómo no, pero en este caso no le he llegado a coger apego. Si conocéis al autor pues bien, se lee bien. Si no le conocéis a mí me gustaron más unos que tiene de una especie de espía con licencia para matar de la CIA, Will Robie (el primero se titula Los inocentes, y le tengo reseñado por ahí).
This ended up being a book that I liked quite a bit but I didn't love it. I have never read any of David Baldacci's work which is actually quite surprising since I have been a big mystery thriller reader for a very long time. Even though I had a hard time getting into the story initially, this book really kept me guessing. I must admit that I tried really hard to figure out the direction the story was going. There was a lot of excitement packed into this story.
Amos Decker is an incredibly interesting character. His uniqueness really drives the entire story. Amos spent about half a minute as a professional football player. He was hit so hard by another player in his first play that his heart stopped and his brain was forever changed. Amos cannot forget anything. His ability to interact with other people has also been altered so he doesn't always behave as you would expect.
Amos's ability to remember every detail and every moment helps him solve crimes in a way the other detectives cannot. He was an excellent detective until his family became the target and his life fell apart. He is called in to help as a consultant on a school shooting in his town. Amos is able to help connect the pieces of the puzzle together as the story takes one twist after another.
I think that this book did a lot of things really well. The characters were interesting. I found myself wondering how difficult it would be remember ever detail of my life. Everyone has things that are best forgotten. All of the characters were flawed which made them seem more realistic. The pacing of the story was perfect. I found that I had a very difficult time setting the book aside at some points because I just had to know what happened next.
The main issue that I had with this book is that some of the plot twists were unrealistic. I like to try to figure out how the pieces fall together every time I read a mystery. I had no clue with this book because some of the twists ended up being rather improbable, at least in my mind. Everything did end up fitting together in a rather exciting and interesting manner so this is really a minor concern for me.
I would recommend this book to fans of mystery thrillers. This is a smartly written novel that sets a wonderful basis for a new series. I definitely plan to continue with this series and would like to read some of David Baldacci's other books in the near future.
I received a copy of this book from Grand Central Publishing via NetGalley for the purpose of providing an honest review.
This is the first book in the Amos Decker series by author David Baldacci and after completing it I immediately purchased the other four books in the series. I always enjoy reading Baldacci's books and on completion always promise myself to read more of his books, this happened again after this one. The Memory Man, is Amos Decker who is a detective in a small town in the Midwest who returns home one night to find his wife and nine year old daughter brutally murdered. The story is set sixteen months later, Decker has quit the police force, lost his house and car and working as a private investigator, living in a motel. The police notify him that a man has confessed to the murders of his family and he naturally wants to know more. Around the same time an intruder murders eight students and teachers at a local school and Decker is asked by the police to assist them. On investigating Decker finds evidence that the latest killings may be linked to that of his family. The killer starts leaving messages that taunt Decker. Amos Decker is no ordinary person and due to a football injury caused by a severe head trauma now has one of the most exceptional brains in the world. His injury left him with total recall, hence the memory man. This is an interesting concept and ideal to carry over to other novels using this character. I loved this book and rarely put it down until I had finished it.
This is my first book by Mr. Baldacci as I had heard he was quite formulaic which is not something that I care for, but I decided to give it a try.
The story was o.k. and I think the plot flowed along well enough but only really our main character is very well developed. I understand that this is typical for series books which I don't usually read. We are assuming we will get to know the other characters in the subsequent books.
What I really wasn't a fan of was the audio with only two voices, one for the females and one for the males. I know that this is the way it was written and I think it would work better in a physical read where you could imagine their voices. The whole "Then Decker said . . . . . ., then Bogart said, . . . "then she answered" format was a bit confusing in the beginning, because the voice was used for several male characters it was a bit hard to keep everyone straight.
All in all it was a good read with some very serious subjects touched upon, murder, rape, terrorism, hermaphroditism and other sexual and mental abnormalities and there are some graphically violent sections of the book.
Read this through Overdrive from my public library!
Memory Man is the 1st book in David Baldacci’s new thriller series and introduces one of the most offbeat characters, Amos Decker, whose injuries suffered in a football game ended not only his career but also resulted in him developing hyperthymesia and synesthesia disorders, which gives him the ability to see time as pictures, able to count in colors and to forget nothing in his head.
Coping with these abilities as best he can, his life is shattered when his wife and young child are brutally murded for no apparent reason. Unable to deal with his grief and desolation, he resigns from the police force, living in the streets and barely making a living as a private PI, not caring about his appearance…grossly-overweight, disheveled, lonely and heartbroken, living day by day.
When a man confesses to the murder of his family, Amos Decker is determined to get involved. Within a few days following the confession, a mass shooting and massacre at the local high school that he had been one of the students, he’s asked to help in the investigation by his former partner, Detective Mary Lancaster, who is in charge of both investigations. An unexpected breakthrough links both of the killings of his family and the school.
The information of Amos side-effects from his injuries, which I had never heard about, made some interesting reading. How he processed his thoughts and findings in his head was riveting stuff. Although there was a lot of repetition about it which I skimmed over a few times. Pretty scary when we watch how Amos deals with everyday things in his life…he almost lives in a world of his own! One minute he and Mary are discussing something and he stops and walks away without saying a word to her.
The story moves pretty fast, from one place to another, finding people connected to Amos’s life…because we soon find out that both the crimes have something to do with him. I also found some parts of the plots and some of the characters, especially who the villains turn out to be, a bit far-fetched and tad unbelievable.
I enjoyed this book but I felt it was a bit too long. And I am certainly going to read the next in the series.
I opted to start this book without first reading the premise so I won't summarize it here. It begins with one shocker and doesn't really let up throughout the entire story.
There are several events that are seemingly unconnected but logically should have some relationship. Amos Decker, a man who has an unfailing memory, is assisting the investigation and all you can do as a reader is follow along and try to keep up. This was one of the few times where I failed to figure out the villain and the motivation.
Decker isn't your conventional private investigator and his history is pretty rough. You may not like him but you'll be fascinated with him. I'm definitely signing up for the next book in this series.
Two narrators were used to handle all characters, separated by gender. I'm normally used to transitions only for changes in point of view. Here the narrators switched whenever their characters had dialogue. Initially it was awkward as it seemed as if they recorded their roles separately. It took a bit to adjust but eventually I settled in. I also loved the dramatic emphasis using music from time to time. It made it feel like a live performance.
I really enjoyed this story, the mystery, suspense and Amos Decker. The audio performance, though different, enhanced my reading experience. This is a strong start to what promises to be a very good series. 4.5 stars
(I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for an honest review)
I'm loving a good thriller these days. With so many thrillers out there I'm spoils for choice. This was definitely one of the best I've read yet.
This had me gripped from the start. The main character, Amos, is unique in the fact that he can remember everything. You'd think that detective work would be easy with this but it is still challenging for him. Memorable side characters, strong plot and excellent writing.
The book blurb sets the scene. As a young man, Amos Decker suffered a colossal blow to the head when playing gridiron; he died; he was resuscitated; his brain rewired itself so that not only does it remember everything, it can replay memories for Amos to re-experience, whether he wants to or not.
Years later, he’s a cop with a wife and daughter who are brutally slaughtered along with his brother-in-law (mistaken identity)? At the same time, someone shoots a bunch of people at Decker’s former high school and steals his old trophies. Clearly, he is the target.
Baldacci sets the scene as Amos thinks to himself.
“I am Amos Decker. I’m forty-two years old and look at least ten years older (on a good day, of which I haven’t had one in four hundred and seventy-nine days), and feel at least a century older than that. I used to be a cop and then a detective but am no longer gainfully employed in either occupation. I have hyperthymesia, which means I never forget anything. I’m not talking about memory techniques where you can teach yourself to remember things better, like the order of a pack of cards using association tricks. No, with me it’s just a turbocharged brain that has somehow unlocked what we all have but never use.”
A blessing and a curse. He has superpowers he doesn’t really know what to do with. He can’t stop replaying the bad stuff, but he can scroll back through years of memories and replay specific conversations word for word.
An interesting premise. But there was a problem. I've explained more in the spoiler at the end.
There is (supposedly) a crucial clue in a conversation that we’re privy to early in the book, which Decker says later that he misunderstood or misheard. He reckons his memory did a kind of auto-correct of the grammar.
So I did my own super-sleuthing and went back to the original conversation and there was nothing suspicious about it. The word Decker thinks was wrong isn’t there, so it’s not a clue. Of course, publishing and printing being what it is, perhaps my library ebook had an auto-correct of its own, in which case, Baldacci should sue the so-and-sos!
Another time, when Decker replays real CCTV footage over and over and finally sees what seems odd about it, he shows it to an FBI guy, but we never “see” the action in detail, so we aren’t given any clues.
For example, if he’d been watching a person seemingly wave his arm in the air and assume he’s signalling someone, we might be content to assume likewise. OR we might think, hey, maybe he’s tossing something somewhere or maybe he’s shrugging something back up his sleeve, or anything.
I like something to suspect!
All in all, disappointing. When we were given clues, I guessed enough that it stopped being fun, and when things are just pulled out of the blue (or plucked from a memory bank), that’s not fair.
Long, repetitive and possibly trading on the author’s past reputation.
I know Baldacci has a lot of fans, and I’m sure one disgruntled reader isn’t going to be a great loss.
I've quoted both sections from my edition, but I’d certainly appreciate if other readers have something different in theirs.
I have read books by David Baldacci that I hate and books by David Baldacci that I like greatly. This one falls into the latter category. While the slightly contrived ending almost caused me to go down to 4 stars I decided that the book over all is a 5. I like it.
So what do we have here? Our hero (Amos Decker) is a man who can forget nothing...really, absolutely nothing. Well, at least not since he was hit by another player in his first pro football game. He died twice on the field and when he awoke he remembered everything and suffered from a form of Synesthesia.
Still it made him an exceptional police officer and then detective for years, until his family was murdered. Then he simply collapsed losing everything and becoming homeless after leaving the police department.
We will follow Amos through the twists and turns of his life as the unsolved crime of his family's deaths turns out to be tied in with a recent horrific crime.
Amos is an excellent character and I hope we see Mr. Baldacci write more about the character. Like the TV characters Monk or Robert Goren we have a man who doesn't function with the mass of humanity as "expected". Emotions don't register the same way, his brain works like a finely tuned memory bank and he makes connections others just...don't.
So, maybe a low 5 but a 5. I like it, recommended.
This book was so entertaining! I actually went ahead and put the rest of the series and also the Will Robie series on hold at my library to pick up tomorrow. I was so into this book that last night I didn’t want to stop reading to go to bed, but had to. I could not predict the way this book would unfold, which I love in mysteries. Amos Decker is an intriguing character with a great supporting cast. I hope this series continues to be as interesting as this first book. So cannot wait to go get to the library to get the other books and another Baldacci series!
My quick and simple overall: loved this book. It was intriguing and not predictable like so many other mysteries and thrillers.
The first criterion for a 5***** rating is whether I wanted to keep reading; I really wanted to keep reading this one. The 2nd is whether I cared about the main character, which I did, despite his many serious flaws. Amos Decker is fascinating, and several other characters were also quite interesting. The plot line is a little stretched, but generally holds up, with some surprises along the way. The main strength of the book, however, is how Baldacci portrays what goes on inside Decker's seriously disturbed brain. Some reviewers objected to the repetition but I thought that was one of the main strengths of the book.
David Baldacci’s "Memory Man" is first in a new series by this prolific author featuring Amos Decker, probably one of the most unusual characters he has ever created. Amos is 6’ 5” (195cm) tall, weighs in at 25 stone (158kg) and in recent times has let himself go. He now lives in a one room apartment in a run-down hotel. Once a police detective, he returned home one evening to find his wife and daughter brutally murdered. The killer was never found. In his younger days, Amos was a professional footballer but his career was cut short when he sustained a serious head injury. When he recovered he found he had unusual skills, medically known as synesthesia and hyperthymesia, the latter providing him with an almost perfect memory of events. Following a school shooting, Amos, who’d been working as a private detective, is called in as a consultant to the local police department. While the perpetrator remains a mystery, it becomes clear that there is a personal connection with Amos; every step he takes in the investigation brings him closer to identifying this brutal killer – and, if he is not careful, to becoming a victim himself.
Sixty-two years old and no sign of slowing down, David Baldacci remains one of the leaders in the field of thriller writing. Just when some of his fans think he couldn’t come up with a character much different from those in his earlier series, up pops Amos Decker, his most unusual, off-beat character yet with a most unusual skill-set. And just to make the story even more relevant to today’s world, his opening scene involves an American high school shooting. Baldacci’s brilliant characterisation isn’t limited to Amos; there are other characters too who are three-dimensional and are sure to feature in future novels in this series. As always, Baldacci writes in a lucid, easy-to-read style, yet in a way that is sure to grip the reader from beginning to end. "Memory Man" is a flawlessly told tale by this master storyteller.
Reads like it was thrown together over a long weekend and phoned-in with stretched out scenes and cartoon-like characters jumping the literary shark in a "been there, done that" serial killer hunt. I liked the authors' last book "The Escape" very much but this book #1 of a new series read like it was written by someone else entirely.
Buenísimo 👌 Thriller de investigación criminal, muy adictivo, con un ritmo creciente que llega a ser trepidante. Me ha gustado todo: el protagonista, los otros personajes, lo bien hilada que está la trama, la investigación tan bien planteada, el final, todo. La vida de Amos Decker cambió radicalmente a partir del asesinato de su familia hace 16 meses. Dejó el Departamento de Policía de Burlington, le embargaron la casa y el coche e intentó sobrevivir como investigador privado de casos menores. Vive en un motel de mala muerte y su aspecto no puede ser peor. Después de todo ese tiempo, un hombre se ha entregado en la Comisaría, afirmando ser el asesino de su familia. Cuando se produce la matanza de varios alumnos y profesores en un instituto de Burlington, donde él había estudiado, el comisario le quiere en el caso, como asesor. A partir de aquí, se inicia una investigación complicada, con la intervención del FBI. Empieza una carrera contrarreloj para descubrir al asesino, una persona muy retorcida que va armando un rompecabezas difícil de comprender, con pistas retorcidas y cadaveres por el camino. Gracias a la especial cualidad que tiene Decker, la hipertimesia, podrá descifrar el galimatias Una cosa está clara: Decker es el objetivo.
What could be better than a new series by a favorite author? Answer: A little bit better story. Don't get me wrong, though; I enjoyed this one and absolutely will read the next one, and the next one, etc. But I was hoping for a WOW! kick-off, and it fell short (if only a tad).
The hero of the series is a big guy named Amos Decker, a former police detective and football star in Burlington. As with most characters like this, Amos comes with baggage - loads and loads of it, in fact. First off, his glory days were cut short on the very first play he attempted as a member of the Cleveland Browns pro football team (I'm from Ohio and a big fan, BTW); he took a hit that curtailed his promising football career and very nearly left him dead.
He survived, but not without very unusual after-effects; he has become an "acquired savant," with hyperthymesia. More simply put, he is one of two handfuls of people who remembers every single moment of every single day and can call any one of them up at will (if you watched TV's "60 Minutes" show back in 2010 or the "Unforgettable" series starring Poppy Montgomery, you know what I mean). Decker's condition is even more rare, though, because he also has synesthia abilities - meaning he is able to associate colors with people and objects. Accompanying all this is the loss of much of his ability to connect emotionally with other people.
Those rare abilities may seem like a good thing - and they certainly can be helpful to a police detective - but for the most part they're a liability because there's no way to get the memories out of his head (seeing them in living color as well does nothing to improve the situation). But he manages to get by until a couple of decades later when he gets hit with a blow that nearly kills him again: The grisly murders of his wife, young daughter and his wife's brother in their home. The killer isn't caught, and Decker heads into a downward spiral that takes him to the depths of despair - homeless and living on the streets.
Just as he's beginning to put his life back together some 16 months after the murders, there's a major turn of events as a man turns himself in and claims to be the killer of Decker's family. Couple that with a mass shooting at the local high school, and local law enforcement officials call on Decker to help (working with his former partner Mary Lancaster).
In large part because he's forced to call up old memories he's managed to push below the surface of his brain (insofar as possible), Decker is a reluctant participant in the investigation - which, thanks to the school shooting, grows to include the FBI. But when it begins to appear that all the tragic events may be somehow related, the two cases take on even more significance and the rush to get to the truth becomes more of an all-out run.
And for the most part, it's a thrilling chase. If I have a complaint, it's that there is an over-abundance of repetition. Granted, given the nature of Decker's affliction, everything plays out in his head over and over and over; but reading it over and over bordered on the tiresome. Besides that, some of the details of how the school shootings were carried out seemed to cross the line of real-life possibility. Still, this book definitely set the stage for further development of this character, and I'm looking forward to the next installment.
Synesthesia and hypermythesia, … a unique combination for a unique new character!
On his very first play as a newly signed pro football player, Amos Decker got his bell rung. Boy, did he ever! The helmet-to-helmet hit was so severe that a Star Trek script would have said Decker’s neural pathways got re-arranged and completely re-written. When he finally regained consciousness (and it was a close call), he discovered that, not only was he a synesthete who saw many of the events around him in a variety of colours, he was also blessed (cursed?) with an indelible and infallible memory incapable of forgetting anything he witnessed, no matter how small or inconsequential! Then – ten years later – Amos Decker’s life changed a second time. His wife, his daughter, and his brother-in-law were brutally murdered. Decker’s life simply collapsed. He quit the police force, loses his home, takes to the streets and the bottle, and eventually finds himself as a second-rate private investigator taking whatever meager jobs he can find to sustain himself.
A year later, a homeless man turns himself in to police and confesses to the home invasion and murders. At the same time, the town’s high school is brutalized with multiple fatalities from a mass shooting. The local police ask Decker to return as a consultant and put his new-found abilities and his experience as a skilled detective to work to determine the truth of his family’s murder and the mass school shooting. Slowly but surely (big surprise … NOT!), the story lines converge in an exciting thriller that will prove to any fan of the genre that Baldacci is simply in a class by himself.
On the face of it, the footings for Amos Decker’s character and storyline sound bizarre at best, if not verging on ridiculous. And yet, somehow, Baldacci pulls it off and builds a character that readers will believe in, sympathize with, and cheer for. The story in this opening novel of a new series might be slightly over long and could stand to have seen the hands of an editor pare it back by a few pages but I’m certain that no reader will call MEMORY MAN any less than a winner and gripping page-turner. Well done, Mr Baldacci. Up next, THE LAST MILE.
Memory Man is the best serial killer mystery I have read after Silence of the Lambs, with which it shares common elements It has an excellent plot whose resolution I could not figure out until the end of the book. I was totally riveted till the end.
This book s far better than the others I have read by this author. It gripped me throughout. I had difficulty putting it down. Amos Decker is a great character, and the atmosphere,plot, and pace was exactly what I look for in a book. This is the best book I have read in a long time.