Member Reviews
Another cracking read by Tana French that will keep you hooked from the very first page. I found it very hard to put it down once I started.
I was sent a copy of The Hunter by Tana French to read and review by NetGalley. I love Tana French’s writing so I was really looking forward to this novel, and I have to say it didn’t disappoint! So beautifully written with a whole host of very believable characters, and as for the descriptions of the locations – you can really imagine yourself there. I didn’t realize until after I had finished reading the book that it was a follow on from one of the author’s previous novels, The Searcher. It was a few years ago that I read, and loved, it that I hadn’t connected the two. This isn’t a book full of action and thrills, more it is a study of people and their interactions, loyalties and enmities in a small Irish town. I for one can’t wait for the next book in the series.
Man, I loved this book! It was so nice to revisit Cal, Trey, Lena and the rest of the town characters. The mystery in this book wasn't as good as the first book in this series, but it was still a good read, and if there's ever a third book in the series, I'm going to rush to read it! Four stars.
My rating is between 2.5 and 3 stars.
This novel is a return to Cal Hooper, the retired Chicago cop who moved to the Irish countryside. This is an atmospheric portrayal of rural Ireland which contrasts the beauty of the landscape with the dark secrets and long-held grudges of its inhabitants.
Considering the novel is set in the midst of a heatwave, the pace is a suitably languorous exploration of the lengths people will go to for the people who matter to them and the collision between love and revenge. The relationships between characters, particularly those between Cal, Lena, and Trey, were the most compelling aspect for me and without these I might have stopped reading before the end.
I am such a huge fan of Tana French’s books and she genuinely never disappoints – The Hunter is no exception. It is a sequel to the fantastic The Searcher and I was so excited to once more immerse myself in the world of these characters in the remote Irish village of Ardnakelty. The Hunter is not an action packed thrill ride, it is a masterful slow burn which ratchets up an undercurrent of simmering tension until it reaches fever pitch. There is a terrific sense of atmosphere present from the first page to the last, with both the beauty and the harshness of the rural Irish landscape making themselves known. As with all her books, French writes sensationally well, breathing life into these characters and the relationships between them with unsentimental sensitivity and depth. The Hunter is layered, gripping, elegant and expertly crafted. Highly recommended.
I’ve loved several books by Tana French, especially The Searcher, the first Cal Hooper mystery, so I was really looking forward to reading the second, The Hunter. I wasn’t disappointed and enjoyed this one almost as much. Like The Searcher this is a slow-burner, a book to savour, not one to rush through.
Two years have gone by since the events told in The Searcher. Ex-Chicago detective Cal Hooper is now settled in Ardnakelty, a remote Irish village and Trey Reddy is now fifteen. Trey’s father, Johnny who has been absent from the village for four years suddenly returns. But Trey is suspicious of her father’s true motives and doesn’t trust him, or the rich Londoner, Cillian Rushborough, Johnny met in London. The two of them are out to fleece the villagers, claiming there is gold on their land. But just who is scamming who?
I liked the slow build up to the mystery – there is a murder, but the body is only discovered later on in in the book. And it is the characters not the murder that are the focal point. I loved Tana French’s beautiful descriptions of the Irish rural landscape. It’s the sort of book I find so easy to read and lose myself in, able to visualise the landscape and feel as if I’m actually there with the characters, watching what is happening.
"The Hunter" is a captivating mystery that will keep readers on the edge of their seats. The story unfolds with a series of intriguing events that will leave you guessing until the very end. The characters are well-developed and their relationships add depth to the plot.
I highly recommend "The Hunter" to readers who enjoy thrillers. It is a book that will keep you interested from start to finish. The author skillfully weaves a web of mystery that will keep you guessing with every turn of the page.
I particularly enjoyed the relationships between Cal and Trey. Each character brings something unique to the story, adding layers of complexity and depth. The interactions between them are interesting and sometimes surprising, making the book even more engaging. It follows on beautifully and develops the relationships from "The Searcher".
Overall, "The Hunter" deserves a solid four-star rating. It is a compelling read that will entertain and intrigue readers. I encourage you to pick up a copy and embark on this thrilling mystery adventure!
This book was everything I hoped it would it be.
I was hooked quickly and completely unwilling to put this down. I devoured this book in just one sitting. I have no regrets and can’t wait to read more by this author.
Tana French is a masterful storyteller and The Hunter, a gently building drama set in Ireland, is proof of her skill. I have been looking forward to this, the follow-on of The Searcher, and feel vindicated in my devotion, though saddened it has now finished.
If you are after omnipotent killers with crazy plotlines, this isn't for you. It's a thoughtful novel spending much of its time in multilevel dialog. An insult doled out by the characters peopling this book does pack a punch but in a tongue in cheek kind of way. I appreciate the poetic turns of phrase and the deeper meaning often seeded into unspoken words. The Hunter revels in the beauty of a simpler life for Cal, retired Chicago cop, his dog and young woodworking protege, Trey. The connections Cal has formed after two years in residence have strengthened as has his desire to keep trouble from his door. His gentle guidance and tenderness toward teenager Trey leads him to step into the path of potential hazards fuelling unrest and conflict. As tension builds their relationship is challenged as is Cal's standing within the community.
A thoughtful novel, The Hunter delivers much to enjoy. Witty repartee and an analysis on the value of loyalty, honesty and the high price for revenge.
It's unreasonably hot in the Irish village where Cal Hooper has made his home. When Trey's father returns from London, bringing with him a scam to help the villagers get rich quick, Cal is primarily interested in protecting Trey, but as the whole village gets involved--first in the scam and then in trying to set up someone for the murder that occurred, Cal realizes he needs to protect himself as well.
A few things--first, it took me a while to realize this book was a sequel to THE SEARCHER, although I found it odd that French wrote about two characters that were so similar and had the same name. Clearly, you do not need to have read THE SEARCHER to read this second book.
Second, I love Tana French, but for some reason, I had trouble getting in to this book. The first half was incredibly slow. The second half picked up and seemed more like a classic Tana French book, but the first 200 pages were a big investment. It could be me--I've been struggling with liking books I expected to love lately and this one was no exception. #TheHunter #NetGalley
Tana French is an author who’s work I have admired both through the books and through others talking about them, and every time I get to sink my teeth into a Tana French I savour every second, the writing creates such an atmosphere that you cannot help but be sat in the middle of the story amongst all the characters
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Thank you to the publisher for an early copy of this one!
"The dead man is lying at the fork where the two paths meet. He's on his left side, his right arm and leg flopping awkwardly, with his curled back to Trey. Even though she's ten paces away and can't see his face, she has no doubt he's dead."
It’s been two years since retired Chicago police officer Cal Hooper moved to rural Ireland and tried to help local teen, Trey Reddy, find out what happened to her missing brother. Trey has become more open with her stand-in father Cal, at least, as open as a 15-year-old can be. The two find a rhythm, Trey helping Cal with his carpentry, hoping to become a woodworker herself.
Then Trey's absent father, Johnny, shows up, back from London after several years, bringing with him a rich Englishman. Johnny is spinning the man a yarn about there being gold in the area, and drawing the townsfolk into his scheming, promising them there'd be money in it for the locals. Cal doesn't like it – all of a sudden Trey seems more reticent and withdrawn, with her own plans of how she wants matters to play out.
I almost don't want to call Tana French just a mystery writer, because her books are so much more than that. They are nuanced character studies. For example, the discovery of a body takes place only about 60% into the book. The tension is not so much over who is a killer, but rather the impact of the murder on Cal, Trey and the rest of the townsfolk. What's important is what's unsaid between Cal and Trey, the small misunderstandings that lead to bad assumptions, and how that plays into nearly bringing the town to its knees.
I adore this author's writing. If there is such a thing as a literary thriller or mystery (there probably is), then this would be it. The pace is by no means fast but that doesn't matter because you're drawn deeply into the main characters' orbits, and gripped tightly by their flaws and strengths. A must if you like your mysteries with a bit of depth.
Cal Hopper has settled into life in Ireland and has developed a close bond with Trey. When her dad, Johnny, returns unexpectedly, their life is upended.
I enjoyed this although found the amount of dialogue hard to follow at times
There's something about the characters though, I love the developing relationships between Cal, Lena and Trey.
Set two years after the events of The Searcher, retired Chicago PD Cal Hooper is settling into life in rural Ireland. He has taken teenager Trey under his wing and together they do carpentry together. But when Trey's absent father Johnny returns home from London with a scheme to con an Englishman out of money, Cal smells trouble on the horizon. Not only for Trey but for the village. Can Cal keep things cool and calm or will this heatwave cause things to boil over?
I feel like I could copy and paste the review I wrote for The Searcher into here: slow paced, beautifully written mystery book, where the author nails the nuances of rural Ireland and develops a palpable tense atmosphere. You could read this as a stand alone but I do think it's advisible to read The Searcher first as parts of that plot crops up and forms most of Trey's feelings for Johnny's scam.
The main POVs in this are Trey, Cal and Lena (Cal's girlfriend), all of them outsiders in this village for different reasons. It is slow paced, the first 20% is setting up the plot and lining things up. But I never mind this with Tana, as I think her writing is exquisite. At one point, I found the tension so heightened, I was utterly gripped! I wasn't fully satisfied with the ending, it's something I'm still ruminating on. Maybe it's not satisfying but realistic.
Overall I enjoyed this and it was interesting to revisit these characters, to see how they've grown. But I'm not sure we need another book in this series and I would love to return to the Dublin Murder Squad again so fingers crossed!
Thanks to NetGalley for the opportunity to read and review this book. I enjoyed this book which was a slow burn. I didn’t realise it was a follow up to another book until I had finished it so it worked for me as a stand alone read. It took a little bit of getting used to the dialogue as the colloquialisms of the local people were illustrated in the dialogue but once I got into the book it was great. Grippy and suspenseful, will be seeking out more from this author!
Retired Chicago detective, Cal Hooper has left the hustle and bustle of big city life and a broken marriage behind him and made a new life for himself in a quiet rural village of Ardnakelty in Ireland. He loves the peace, the rugged beauty of the mountains and countryside and the people; reserved but loyal once they get to know you. A good carpenter, Cal has set about restoring his dilapidated cottage, establishing a vegetable garden and making and fixing furniture for the community. He’s also been seeing Lena, a local widow, who lives near him and has made a friend in his neighbour Mart, who always has his hand on the village pulse.
When Cal first met Theresa Reddy, (aka Trey), two years ago she asked him for his help to find her missing brother Brendan. At the time, with her father absent and mother busy with a clutch of younger children, Trey was somewhat wild and fearful of strangers and skittish as a wild animal, but as she got to know Cal and come to trust them, they developed a strong bond and he has since been teaching her how to restore and make new furniture.
Now, at fifteen Trey is much sought after by the community for her skill and is developing into a typical teenager. That is until her father, feckless Johnny Reddy returns after four years in London, bringing an Englishman and his get rich quick schemes along with him. He attempts to charm everyone with his friendly and easy-going ways but Cal is suspicious. He can’t help getting hooked into finding out what Johnny is really up to if he is to protect Trey, while she is bent on planning revenge for those involved in her brother’s disappearance, even her actions may end up hurting those she loves the most.
As with French’s previous book, ‘The Searcher’ which introduced us to these wonderful characters, don’t expect a fast-paced thriller, but rather a slow build full of interesting characters and relationship dynamics. The writing is gorgeous, richly evocative of the Irish landscape and perfectly capturing the authentic local characters, with their innate charm and humour.
The summer is an unusually hot one with everyone and everything is baking; there’s no iconic Irish mist and gentle rain to be seen here. As the heat and suspense ramps up, the atmosphere becomes dark and charged, building up until it erupts. Compelling and totally riveting, this could be read as a stand-alone, but you’d be missing out on a lot of the character and story development in the first novel, the ‘The Searcher’ (as well as missing out on another captivating read).
A story of relationships, trust, who we consider family and makes you question the lengths you would go to protect those you care about. Set in an Irish mountainside townland we learn about Trey. A wild teen and oldest sibling being raised single handedly by their mother, while their good-for-nothing father Johnny is somewhere else finding and causing trouble. The earlier chapters slowly set the scene and build on the relationship Trey is developing with father-like Cal, an ex police officer from America. Cal recognises the potential in Trey and takes her under his wing, teaching carpentry skills and helping the Ardnakelty community see how Trey Is nothing like her Father. Relationships are interrupted and circumstances change in an instant - the reappearance of Treys father and his lure of a great money making idea. Here their lives begin to splinter and characters are faced with questions; Who can be trusted, who is helping who, is blood/family thicker. Plenty of tension in the second half of the book as the pace picks up. While I found it a very slow start, I persevered and enjoyed the story,but it hasn't leaving me wanting more from this author just yet.
I really enjoyed The Searcher and was delighted to be given the chance to read The Hunter.
I’m sad to say that this follow up book didn’t capture my attention. I liked Cal and Trey and think they are brilliant characters and chuckled away at the Irish banter but I just couldn’t get into the storyline.
Many thanks to #NetGalley and #Penguin for a copy of the book in exchange for an honest review.
I'm a huge Tana French fan, and although it's the Dublin Murder Squad novels that are my true love, I enjoyed the slower-burn suspense of both The Wych/Witch Elm and this novel's predecessor, The Searcher. So I don't know what went wrong here. The Hunter returns to Ardnakelty, a small village in Western Ireland, and to Cal, a retired American cop, and his relationships with local widow Lena and teenager Trey. This novel opens when Trey's father Johnny abruptly turns up in the village with a scheme to discover hidden gold in the countryside, and starts getting other men on board; Trey is suspicious and afraid of her father's true motives. In my review of The Witch Elm, I said that I missed the interesting tensions that arose when French plays with genre in the Dublin Murder Squad novels, and in The Searcher, I felt Cal was a less complex character than her other protagonists. The Hunter pairs both these problems in its opening quarter, when almost nothing happens and what did happen felt frustratingly cliched. Cal, Lena and Trey have the feel to me of characters that have completed their arcs; OK, Johnny is now posing an external threat, but I wasn't sure how much more there was to say, or why the first Ardnakelty book needed a sequel at all. French's writing is as good as ever, but I just couldn't continue with this.
EXCERPT: Johnny always liked to make a fine entrance. When he turned up outside her window, he came smelling of expensive aftershave - robbed, probably - with his jeans ironed, every hair in place, and the Cortina waxed to a sparkle. He was the only fella Lena knew who didn't have broken fingernails. Today his clothes are shiny-new right down to the shoes, and not cheap shite either, but his hair is straggling over his ears and flopping in his eyes. He's tried to slick it into place, but it's too overgrown to behave. If Johnny Reddy has come home in too much of a hurry to get a haircut, it's because he's got trouble following close behind.
ABOUT 'THE HUNTER': It’s a blazing summer when two men arrive in a small village in the West of Ireland. One of them is coming home. Both of them are coming to get rich. One of them is coming to die.
Cal Hooper took early retirement from Chicago PD and moved to rural Ireland looking for peace. He’s found it, more or he’s built a relationship with a local woman, Lena, and he’s gradually turning Trey Reddy from a half-feral teenager into a good kid going good places. But then Trey’s long-absent father reappears, bringing along an English millionaire and a scheme to find gold in the townland, and suddenly everything the three of them have been building is under threat. Cal and Lena are both ready to do whatever it takes to protect Trey, but Trey doesn’t want protecting. What she wants is revenge.
MY THOUGHTS: I have rationed myself reading The Hunter, eking out the pleasure of being back in Ardnakelty with Trey, Lena and Cal for as long as possible. It's a place I never want to leave. I love the characters Tana French has created, and the ambience of the setting.
Ardnakelty is a small, fictional West Ireland town. It's the sort of place where you might think nothing ever happens. You'd be wrong.
The Hunter follows on from The Searcher, which you really need to read prior to this if you want to understand why Trey is hell-bent on exacting revenge. You will also get the background on Cal, a retired Chicago cop, his relationship with Lena, and why he is so protective of Trey.
The feckless Johnny is Trey's father, returned home after a long absence; a man who is always looking for the easy way, a charmer, a man who tells a story well. A man not to be trusted. He wanders back into his home, and everywhere else, like he'd only popped out to get a packet of cigarettes, but with a story (or five, the story depending on whom he is telling it to) at the ready.
The Hunter is not a thriller although I was thrilled in a quiet way. When I put this down, I couldn't wait to get back to it; to people like Tom Pat, named for both his grandfathers and still insisting on being addressed by both names even years after their deaths for fear of insulting one of them. The Hunter is very much a character driven novel, told in a very Irish way; meandering, wandering off track, before coming back to the point from an entirely different direction. I loved it, and if Ardnakelty were a real place, populated by these characters, I would go visit, maybe even stay a while, or longer.
⭐⭐⭐⭐.5
#TheHunter #NetGalley
THE AUTHOR: Tana French is the New York Times bestselling author of In the Woods, The Likeness, Faithful Place, Broken Harbor, The Secret Place, The Trespasser and The Witch Elm. Her books have won awards including the Edgar, Anthony, Macavity and Barry Awards, the Los Angeles Times Award for Best Mystery/Thriller, and the Irish Book Award for Crime Fiction. She lives in Dublin with her family.
DISCLOSURE: Thank you to Penguin General, UK, via NetGalley for providing a digital ARC of The Hunter by Tana French for review. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.