Editors Reads Verdict
The Poet, Michael Connelly's first standalone, is one of his finest novels: a gripping serial-killer thriller narrated by reporter Jack McEvoy as he hunts a murderer of cops who signs his crimes with Poe. With a famous twist and the introduction of FBI agent Rachel Walling, it's a landmark of the genre.
What We Loved
- One of Connelly's finest novels
- A gripping serial-killer premise
- A famous, effective twist
- Introduces FBI agent Rachel Walling
Minor Drawbacks
- Graphic, disturbing subject matter
- A long, twisty plot
- The mid-1990s setting shows its age
Key Takeaways
- → A reporter's instinct can crack a case
- → A serial killer can hide in plain sight
- → The best twists recast everything
- → Grief can drive a relentless pursuit
| Author | Michael Connelly |
|---|---|
| Publisher | Grand Central |
| Pages | 512 |
| Published | January 1, 1996 |
| Language | English |
| Genre | Thriller, Crime Fiction, Mystery, Fiction |
| Difficulty | Beginner |
| Best For | Crime-thriller readers; fans of serial-killer fiction and journalist protagonists. |
How The Poet Compares
The Poet at a glance against 3 similar books readers weigh alongside it.
| Book | Author | Rating | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Poet (this book) | Michael Connelly | ★ 4.2 | Crime-thriller readers |
| Fair Warning | Michael Connelly | ★ 3.9 | Jack McEvoy and Connelly readers |
| The Narrows | Michael Connelly | ★ 4.0 | Harry Bosch and Poet readers |
| The Scarecrow | Michael Connelly | ★ 3.9 | Jack McEvoy and Connelly readers |
A Reporter’s Grief
The Poet, Michael Connelly’s first standalone novel and the introduction of crime reporter Jack McEvoy, is one of the finest things he has written — a gripping, landmark serial-killer thriller built on a foundation of personal grief. McEvoy, a Denver crime reporter, refuses to accept the official verdict that his twin brother, a homicide detective, killed himself. Driven by grief and a reporter’s instinct, McEvoy digs into the death and uncovers something terrible: a pattern of detectives across the country dying in apparent suicides, each death marked with a line of Edgar Allan Poe. He has stumbled onto a serial killer — dubbed the Poet — who murders cops and stages their deaths as suicides, and the story that could make McEvoy’s career could also get him killed.
The premise is the book’s gripping foundation. A reporter investigating his own brother’s death, uncovering a serial killer who preys on detectives, gives The Poet both personal stakes and a chilling, distinctive villain. McEvoy’s grief drives his relentless pursuit, the personal loss giving the investigation an emotional intensity beyond a professional assignment, and the Poet’s signature — the Poe quotations, the staged suicides of cops — makes him a memorable, frightening antagonist. The combination of a grief-driven reporter and a literary serial killer of detectives gives the novel a compelling hook.
A Reporter’s Pursuit
The Poet is distinguished by its protagonist: not a cop or a PI but a journalist, and the reporter’s perspective gives the novel a fresh angle on the serial-killer thriller. McEvoy pursues the Poet with a reporter’s instincts — the nose for a story, the dogged investigation, the willingness to push where others won’t — and his pursuit eventually intersects with an FBI investigation, drawing him into the official hunt for the killer. The reporter’s-eye view of a serial-killer investigation is one of the novel’s distinctive pleasures, McEvoy navigating the tension between getting the story and stopping the killer.
The FBI investigation introduces Rachel Walling, an agent who would become a significant recurring character in Connelly’s universe, appearing later in the Bosch series and the McEvoy novels. Walling’s role in The Poet establishes her as a capable, complex figure, and her dynamic with McEvoy — professional, with an undercurrent of attraction and mistrust — adds texture to the hunt. The introduction of Walling is one of the novel’s lasting contributions to Connelly’s wider work, and her presence enriches the FBI investigation into the Poet.
A Famous Twist
The Poet is justly famous for its twist — a late revelation that recasts the entire novel, the kind of reversal that prizes the reader’s assumptions and overturns them. Without spoiling it, the twist is among the most effective in Connelly’s work, a genuine surprise that reframes what came before and elevates the novel above a conventional serial-killer thriller. The best twists recast everything, and The Poet’s does exactly that, rewarding the reader’s attention and delivering a shock that lands. The twist is a key reason the novel is regarded as a genre landmark.
The novel’s subject matter is graphic and disturbing — the Poet’s crimes, his exploitation of children and his murder of cops, are dark material — and the long, twisty plot asks for the reader’s close attention as McEvoy and the FBI unravel the killer’s pattern. But the gripping premise, the reporter’s perspective, the introduction of Walling, and the famous twist combine into one of Connelly’s finest novels. Connelly’s lean prose and assured plotting carry the long, dark thriller to its surprising resolution, and the mid-1990s setting, while dating the book, gives it a specific period texture. The Poet is a landmark of the serial-killer genre.
A Genre Landmark
The Poet is one of Michael Connelly’s finest novels and a landmark of the serial-killer thriller, and its strengths are the gripping premise, the reporter protagonist, the introduction of Rachel Walling, and the famous twist. The grief-driven hunt for a killer of cops gives the novel personal stakes and a chilling villain, McEvoy’s reporter’s perspective gives it a fresh angle, and the twist elevates it above the genre. The graphic subject matter and the long plot ask for the reader’s investment, but the quality of the thriller distinguishes it.
Connelly’s lean prose and masterful plotting carry the dark, twisty thriller, and the famous twist delivers a genuine shock. The Poet is Connelly at his finest, anchored by a reporter’s grief-driven hunt for a literary serial killer and a landmark twist, one of his best novels and a key entry in his interconnected universe.
Where It Sits in the Series
The Poet is the first Jack McEvoy novel and a foundational entry in Connelly’s interconnected universe, introducing Rachel Walling and the serial killer who returns in the Bosch novel The Narrows. It precedes the McEvoy sequels The Scarecrow and Fair Warning, and works as a standalone. For readers exploring Connelly’s universe, it is an essential, landmark entry.
Among Connelly’s novels, The Poet stands out as one of his finest — a landmark serial-killer thriller narrated by a grief-driven reporter, with a famous twist and the introduction of Rachel Walling. It is a gripping, dark, masterfully plotted thriller, among the best things Connelly has written and a foundational entry in his interconnected universe.
Our rating: 4.2/5 — One of Connelly’s finest, a landmark serial-killer thriller in which reporter Jack McEvoy hunts a murderer of cops who signs his crimes with Poe, capped by a famous, effective twist.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is "The Poet" about?
Crime reporter Jack McEvoy refuses to believe his twin brother, a homicide detective, killed himself. Digging into the death, McEvoy uncovers a pattern: detectives across the country dying in staged suicides, each marked with a line of Edgar Allan Poe. He has stumbled onto a serial killer — and a story that could destroy him.
Who should read "The Poet"?
Crime-thriller readers; fans of serial-killer fiction and journalist protagonists.
What are the key takeaways from "The Poet"?
A reporter's instinct can crack a case A serial killer can hide in plain sight The best twists recast everything Grief can drive a relentless pursuit
Is "The Poet" worth reading?
The Poet, Michael Connelly's first standalone, is one of his finest novels: a gripping serial-killer thriller narrated by reporter Jack McEvoy as he hunts a murderer of cops who signs his crimes with Poe. With a famous twist and the introduction of FBI agent Rachel Walling, it's a landmark of the genre.
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