Long Gone: A Novel
Long Gone: A Novel book cover

Long Gone: A Novel

Hardcover – June 21, 2011

Price
$14.35
Format
Hardcover
Pages
368
Publisher
Harper
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0061999185
Dimensions
6 x 1.17 x 9 inches
Weight
1.2 pounds

Description

Product Description After a layoff and months of struggling, Alice Humphrey finally lands her dream job managing a new art gallery in Manhattan’s trendy Meatpacking District. According to Drew Campbell, the well-suited corporate representative who hires her, the gallery is a passion project for its anonymous, wealthy, and eccentric owner. Drew assures Alice that the owner will be hands off, allowing her to run the gallery on her own. Her friends think it sounds too good to be true, but Alice sees a perfect opportunity to make a name for herself beyond the shadow of her famous father, an award-winning and controversial film maker. Everything is perfect until the morning Alice arrives at work to find the gallery gone—the space stripped bare as if it had never existed—and Drew Campbell’s dead body on the floor. Overnight, Alice’s dream job has vanished, and she finds herself at the center of police attention with nothing to prove her innocence. The phone number Drew gave her links back to a disposable phone. The artist whose work she displayed doesn’t seem to exist. And the dead man she claims is Drew has been identified as someone else. When police discover ties between the gallery and a missing girl, Alice knows she’s been set up. Now she has to prove it—a dangerous search for answers that will entangle her in a dark, high-tech criminal conspiracy and force her to unearth long-hidden secrets involving her own family… secrets that could cost Alice her life. Amazon Exclusive: Michael Connelly Reviews Long Gone Michael Connelly ’s Edgar Award-winning first novel, The Black Echo , was published in 1992 and based in part on a true crime that had occurred in Los Angeles. Since then he has written more than 18 novels, the most recent of which is The Fifth Witness . You know how the song goes--“If I can make it here, I’ll make it anywhere.” The anthem for a city and a state of mind, powered by the voice of its own son, Frank Sinatra, even if technically he came from across the river. New York, New York . It is truly the first song on the soundtrack of the city. And it points up the risk and reward of living in the greatest city in the world. Well, what about the risks and rewards in writing a novel about the greatest city in the world? To me the challenge would be intimidating, even daunting, before I got the first word down on the first page. But not to Alafair Burke. With Long Gone she makes the city her own. She takes New York with a knowing and confident hand, folding its teeming streets into character and plot in a story that is never less than gripping. At center you have Alice Humphrey. She is the daughter of privilege in a city that doesn’t pay much mind to that privilege. She’s on her own and that is the beating heart of this book. Alice on her own. Burke constructs this book with the precision of a watchmaker. It is a contraption piece that closes tightly around Alice and then we are with her as she investigates the set up and finds her way to safety. I am familiar with most of Burke’s work and I think Alice is her best heroine yet. She connects with us on so many levels. She is an everywoman cornered by forces she doesn’t recognize or understand in a city with too many back alleys and secrets to ever know. She is from a family that holds secrets from her as well as the world. But no matter. She is relentless in her pursuit of the truth, whichever way it is finally told. And in that we connect to her, admire her, like her. We feel for Alice Humphrey and want to be there when she sees it all through. That is the writer’s most difficult task, building the bridge of empathy between reader and protagonist. Burke does it here with a character who is persistent in simply refusing to be a victim. Don’t we all wish we were the same. Though any writer will flat out tell you that the easier it looks the harder it is to get on the page, Alafair Burke makes this one look like a walk in the park. Frank Sinatra would certainly be proud. Start spreading the news. “Blistering…. As carefully plotted as a surgeon’s heart transplant…. [Burke] writes with style, class and precision; just try to guess the identity of the killer here. A-” — Les Roberts, Cleveland Plain Dealer “Alafair Burke’s first standalone is an absolutely riveting must read―and the ending is a shocker you’ll never see coming.” — Lisa Scottoline, New York Times-bestselling author of Save Me “ Long Gone is a tremendous novel, and Alafair Burke is one of the finest young crime writers working today.” — Dennis Lehane, New York Times-bestselling author of Moonlight Mile “ Long Gone is a red-hot firecracker of a thriller with all the right stuff-perfect pacing, plotting, and suspense. If you already love Alafair Burke’s novels, buckle up for her best book ever. If you haven’t read her yet, the time is now.” — Lisa Unger, New York Times-bestselling author of Darkness My Old Friend “Alafair Burke understands the criminal mind. Long Gone is both an education and an entertainment of the first order. This is a very clever and very smart novel by a very clever and smart writer. The dialogue crackles, the plot is intriguing, and the pacing is perfect.” — Nelson DeMille, New York Times-bestselling author of The Lion “Addictive…. Alafair Burke delivers her best book to date with her first stand-alone thriller…. A masterful read. Humphrey is an everywoman, and readers will care about what happens to her…. Compelling.” — Jeff Ayers, Associated Press “ Long Gone is the type of book that should come with a warning. It’s a compulsively readable, highly addictive story. The ending will leave you breathless.” — Karin Slaughter, New York Times-bestselling author of Fallen “Burke’s first stand-alone novel is a chilling psychological thriller which weaves disparate characters together in a web of revenge, deceit and betrayal. This clever, twisting plot serves up numerous victims and numerous criminals―plus police who can’t be bothered with the truth.” — Romantic Times (4 ½ Stars) “Sensational…. Exciting…. Alice is a compelling heroine and the nightmare she finds herself dropped into is scary believable.” — Carole E. Barrowman, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel What if everything you thought you knew turned out to be a lie? After a layoff and months of struggling, Alice Humphrey finally lands her dream job managing a new art gallery in Manhattan's trendy Meatpacking District. According to Drew Campbell, the well-heeled corporate representative who hires her, the gallery is a passion project for its anonymous, wealthy, and eccentric owner. Her friends think it sounds too good to be true, but Alice sees an opportunity to make a name for herself beyond the shadow of her famous father, an award-winning and controversial filmmaker. Everything is perfect until the morning Alice arrives at work to find the gallery gone—the space stripped bare as if it had never been there—and Drew Campbell's dead body on the floor. Overnight, Alice's dream job has vanished, and she finds herself at the center of a police investigation, with the evidence mounting against her. The phone number Drew gave her links back to a disposable phone. The artist whose work she displayed doesn't seem to exist. And the dead man she claims is Drew has been identified as someone else. When police discover ties between the gallery and a missing girl, Alice knows she's been set up. Now she has to prove it—a dangerous search for answers that will entangle her in a dark, high-tech criminal conspiracy and force her to unearth long-hidden secrets involving her own family . . . secrets that could cost Alice her life. Alafair Burke is a New York Times bestselling author whose most recent novels include The Wife and The Ex , which was nominated for the Edgar Award for best novel. She also co-authors the bestselling Under Suspicion series with Mary Higgins Clark. A former prosecutor, she now teaches criminal law and lives in Manhattan and East Hampton. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Long Gone
  • is a tremendous novel, and Alafair Burke is one of the finest young crime writers working today.”--Dennis Lehane, author of
  • Moonlight Mile
  • Echoing the intensity of Harlan Coben’s
  • Tell No One
  • and the psychological depth of Laura Lippman’s
  • What the Dead Know
  • , Alafair Burke’s first stand-alone novel catapults her into the top ranks of modern suspense. In New York City’s cut-throat world of art, appearances can be deceiving—especially when art world newcomer Alice Humphrey becomes a suspect in a gruesome murder at a Chelsea gallery, and is thrown into a treacherous labyrinth of intrigue, crime, and conspiracy. Now, Alice must discover the truth behind the murder before the unsolved mystery claims her as its next victim.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(472)
★★★★
25%
(393)
★★★
15%
(236)
★★
7%
(110)
23%
(361)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Dream job becomes nightmare in this novel

After many months of joblessness, Alice attends an opening at a former cutting edge artist in a NY gallery. She meets Drew Campbell, a business recruiter, who is looking for someone to run a contemporary art gallery for his rich closeted friend and after chatting her up, offers her the job she has been dreaming of since she got her MFA and went to work for the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Things go smoothly securing the gallery space, hanging the show for the consort of said rich closeted friend, making those first sales online until Alice comes in to open one morning and finds Drew sprawled in the middle of the gallery....in a pool of blood. Suddenly there's a picture of Alice kissing Drew, Alice's name on the gallery lease, and missing gloves with traces of gunshot residue.

While Alice's storyline is the main focus, we have two concurrent plotlines of a seemingly unrelated story of a teenage missing girl, her single mother and the police detective Morhart's investigation and FBI agent's Hank Beckman's trailing of a scuzbag who was involved in his sister's death. The author gradually reveals how these threads intertwine and every chapter has a new reveal.

Tightly written, Long Gone sheds some light on the contemporary art gallery scene to newcomers and gives you better insight to life in the Big Apple without having to endure its noise, dirt and jumbled humanity. While the first third of the book drags a little, once the characters are set up, the story rockets along. You end up cheering for these characters after all the stuff they go through-and that ultimately is the final assessment of the impact of this story.
15 people found this helpful
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Awful

I've read other novels by Burke and they've been at least entertaining. 212 was decent so I thought I'd read this one.

It was really awful. Seriously.

It takes far too long to draw the reader into the plot threads. The writing and plot are very generic and none of the characters have their own voice so I got really confused trying to keep them apart and to keep track of them. I kept having to go back and figure out who someone was - very disappointing.

I thought about putting it down, but I was so far into the book that I just sucked it up and got to the end. It felt like I had been reading this book for 3 years when I finished. This does not a good thriller make.
12 people found this helpful
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Alafair Burke's Best Novel Yet!

I'm an unabashed fan of Ms. Burke's writing. Her previous novels feature compelling lead characters, decent realism, and avoid trite storylines. "Long Gone" stands out from these other novels in a couple of significant ways. First, Alice Humphrey isn't a cop or prosecutor, or even someone I expected to like and respect. By the story's midpoint, she won me over. Second, as a retired cop I prefer thrillers and mysteries which feature multi-layered crimes, authentic bad guys/girls, and keep me guessing until the end of the novel. While Alafair's other novels are pretty good in those respects, "Long Gone" is the best by far. I predict if this is your first experience reading an Alafair Burke novel, you will be hungry to read all of her other stuff!

Let me add a couple of related notes, in the interest of full disclosure: Although I received this book at no cost through the Vine program, I also pre-ordered "Long Gone", because I don't mind paying for a good book. There's another reason why I'm such a fan of Alafair Burke...She is one of the most gracious, reader-friendly authors around today, which makes it a pleasure to support her awesome talent.
9 people found this helpful
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An engrossing thriller

Alice Humphrey is looking for the perfect job, working somewhere in the art world. Determined to support herself, she cuts herself off financially from her parents, Oscar Award winning director, Frank Humphrey, and his beautiful wife, former actress, Rose. While attending an opening at a gallery she meets Drew Campbell. Almost immediately he offers her the chance of a lifetime. He would like her to manage the new Highline Gallery that his client, a reclusive billionaire, is opening. She will virtually have free reign to do whatever she wants, with one stipulation: she must showcase the controversial work of a good "friend" of the owner. The work must be shown for a specific period of time, several times a year. After that, the gallery is hers to do with what she wants.

It seems like everyone has a secret. Hank Beckman, an FBI agent, has already been officially disciplined for "stalking" the man he is convinced had something to do with his sisters' death. He's been good for the past two months, but now feels the urge to just do one little drive by of the guys place. What could it hurt? But he sees something that doesn't make sense and he can't seem to leave it alone. Then there's Becca Stevenson, your typical teenage girl. Excited with the prospect of the cute boy in school actually liking her, she contemplates sexting with him. But there is also a mysterious someone she is talking to. And then one night Becca doesn't come home, and her single-mother Joann is devastated. Especially when she learns that her not-so-perfect daughter has been keeping secrets from her. Even Alice's parents and her brother Ben have parts of their lives they would rather remain hidden.

Despite the fact that the work being shown at the gallery is a bit on the dubious side, the opening appears to go well. That is until the protestors arrive, picketing outside and claiming that the work being shown is child pornography. That the body images are those of pre-pubescent girls. Alice's small little gallery soon becomes national news and suddenly her world implodes around her. She cannot get a hold of Drew, the gallery has been emptied, as if it never existed in the first place, and a dead body is found inside. When nothing that Alice tells the police proves true, she becomes suspect number one. Almost as if that role was created for her. Could it have been? Suddenly everything is seeming as if it is just a little too good to be true.

Alice soon understands that it is up to her, and her alone, to prove her innocence. She must figure out what all these random things ~ the mystery artist and his work, the reclusive billionaire, the family lawyer, the protestors, a BMW, the fingerprints of missing teen Becca, in the gallery, the "casting couch" allegations against her father, ITH corporation, the company name on her paycheck, the mystery man Hank is shadowing, and one fateful night years ago ~ have to do with the dead body in her gallery. Will she stick around to face the music or will she be long gone when it's time to accept the consequences?

Long Gone is Alafair Burke's first stand-alone thriller and it has no trouble standing on its own two feet. It grabs you from the get go right up until its stunning conclusion. Just when you think you have it all figured out, another twist knocks you around and you need to rethink your previous conclusions. Ms. Burke has an inherent talent for bringing her readers right into the pages of the book, making you feel as if you are living the story along with Alice and everyone she comes into contact with. Long Gone is an engaging read, with a new protagonist you'll enjoy getting to know and who you will continually root for, an interesting supporting cast of characters, each with their own six-degrees-of-separation connection to the murderer,and a multifaceted plot that constantly surprises the reader. Without a doubt, Long Gone should be on every mystery reader's must-read list. An engrossing thriller that can hold its own against any other in its genre.
8 people found this helpful
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A Solid Effort

This is a troubling novel in some respects. It is also sweeping in its concept, complicated in its execution, crowded in its population and ultimately nearly flawless in its resolution. But you have to get past the first hundred pages.

Alice Humphrey is a child of privilege. Her father is a renowned award-winning film director and well-known philanderer. Her mother, a former actress of some renown, an alcoholic. Her brother Ben a recovering addict. Alice, once an aspiring child actress, is out of work, depressed, physically inept, angry with her family and herself. She is a most unlikable protagonist. Burke takes a serious risk at the beginning of the novel when she makes Alice so desperate and such a whiner. You want to slam her into a soft chair and scream at Alice Humphrey to shut up and suck it up and shape up.

Visiting a gallery opening in Manhattan, she's offered a job, seemingly out of the blue, so things may be looking up, although she still seems shackled by an amazing number of issues. At times Alice seems nearly paralyzed.

That's the first hundred or so pages. Then the shape and depth of the thing begin to take on form and life. Then the language begins to really take hold of your sensibilities and the characters begin to sort themselves out and the plot uncoils, fastening to your sensibilities with an insidious grip that doesn't let go. Then the pace picks up and you find yourself sliding over to Alice's side as she discovers and begins to do battle with a quicksand of circumstance that threaten to destroy her over and over. As the novel progresses, Alice asserts herself more and more in a bid to win readers to her side. Is she successful?

The book uncorks a diabolical plot that will amaze readers with its intricacies, something the author is able to pull off and satisfactorily conclude. It's testament to her skill as a writer. Does the writing, the dark plot and the conclusion make up for an unattractive protagonist at the beginning? It did for me, but it will be interesting to follow the fortunes of the novel.
7 people found this helpful
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One of the best mysteries in a long time ...

Lisa Scottoline's blurb is a great hint. Although Burke has her own voice, her style, plot and characters will draw praise from Scottoline fans who are impatiently waiting for Lisa's next offering. The combo of fast-paced writing, sophisticated contemporary style, believable flawed-but-likeable characters ... it's hard to find a mystery that meets these standards today.

Long Gone is one of the rare books that's hard to put down. The plot does have many twists and turns but it worked for me. The beginning is especially powerful: many of us can relate to Alice's predicament. It's easy to second-guess her judgment but I found myself thinking, "How many readers would have done the same thing?" Most people wouldn't fall into this kind of trap but many do grab what seem to be lifelines while they ignore red flags flying all over the place.

The energy and pace never stopped. I didn't try to guess the ending and was never tempted to peek ahead. The ending was satisfying: all the elements were tied together in a surprising but believable way.

Great book! When's the next one coming out?
6 people found this helpful
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Critical reader LOVED this book

WOW! As a great lover of well written complex thrillers, I am often disappointed in books I read. Not this one. There will be enough reviews of the plot etc. so that I won't repeat them. Suffice it to say characters seem authentic, plot is riveting, resolution surprising. I loved this book.
6 people found this helpful
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Critical reader LOVED this book

WOW! As a great lover of well written complex thrillers, I am often disappointed in books I read. Not this one. There will be enough reviews of the plot etc. so that I won't repeat them. Suffice it to say characters seem authentic, plot is riveting, resolution surprising. I loved this book.
6 people found this helpful
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"My Heart Belongs to Daddy?

Alafair Burke uses the old innocent victim plot here. Alice, out of work for months, finds the too good to be true job at a gallery, the gallery vanishes, the guy who hired her is murdered, the police consider her a suspect, and so forth. If Hitchcock had filmed it he probably would have cast Doris Day as Alice.

But of course intrepid Alice, doing everything you're not supposed to do (a prerequisite for these sorts of tales), tries her best to extricate herself from peril, with the aid of an odd assortment of characters.

The scene is present-day New York City for the most part, with excursions outside of town, especially in the two sub-plots, which you'll probably suspect will turn out to be part of the main plot. You'd be right.

The author can do intricate plotting and dialogue that seems real, and she makes those minor characters (also a prerequisite for these sorts of tales), the ones who so helpfully turn up to supply missing bits of information, seem believeable.

Nicely done!
6 people found this helpful
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3.5 Stars for a solid, engaging whodunnit

This was a solid, engaging thriller that had some ups and downs to me. Here they are to help you decide if its for you:

SHORT SUMMARY: Unemployed woman gets dream job in art gallery - only to find herself in the midst of a set up for murder. Separately, another girl goes missing. Who is trying to set her up? Can she extract herself from this mess? How did the girl go missing? Where has she disappeared to?

1) A well-plotted who-dunnit with an intriguing concept
From the first page, the writer had me intrigued with Alice and set up a complex whodunnit plot. If you like following clues and and trying to figure out who and why is behind it all - this is well plotted for that, with lots of twists and turns as clues are revealed. Having said that, while it all ties together well in the end with some surprising revelations - I'm not sure enough clues were laid down really for having anyone piece it together before the end.

2) There's a side story about a missing girl that seemed out of place.
Though the author weaves the two tales tangentially together - it has a totally disconnected feel to it. If it's supposed to be a red herring, for me, it didn't really work. Partly because that line of the story gets short thrift at the end, and feels forced.

3) I found myself invested in the answer to the plot, but not the characters
I just didn't find I cared about these characters. Admittedly, there are a lot of them - and that side-story doesn't help - so much of the character development gets short thrift. Initially I was invested in Alice plight, but as the story progresses even she seems to have only surface emotions and reactions. I just wish I had cared and understood the key players characters and releationships more - it would have made the book and the resolution that much more enjoyable to me.

BOTTOM LINE: 3.5 Stars for a solid, engaging whodunnit. While it's not a book "I couldn't put down" it is one I wanted to continue reading to see where it lead. So, it makes it good as a summer pool-side or plane ride read.
5 people found this helpful