A River Red with Blood by John Connolly
Monday, June 1, 2026 at 10:01AM 
Published by Atria/Emily Bestler Books on June 2, 2026
Horror fiction and crime fiction are a natural fit — at least when the crimes are horrific — but I am not a great fan of supernatural explanations for evil, common through they are in the world of crime fiction. I am nevertheless a great fan of John Connolly, if only because his prose is on a higher level than most crime novelists can reach. My ambivalence about infusing a ghost story into a crime novel has never impaired my enjoyment of Connolly’s work.
Readers who follow the Charlie Parker series know that his daughter Jennifer died with her mother in 1998. Jennifer often appears to Charlie. Lately she’s been appearing to warn him of a danger from the beyond. Jennifer makes brief appearances in A River Red with Blood and a small part of the story concerns a contract for a hit on Parker that seems to have been offered by a spirit. I am pleased to report that the balance of crime fiction and supernatural/horror story tips substantially in favor of crime.
The crime that engages Parker’s interest is the murder of Scott Theriault. Scott was a seventeen-year-old student at the Spero School in the Kennebec Valley. Spero is a private school that specializes in correcting the behavior of troubled youth with strict rules and harsh discipline. Scott supposedly ran away from the school, got drunk in the woods on stolen liquor, and accidentally drowned.
Scott’s father believes his troubled son was killed. Scott’s father is in prison. Perhaps he feels guilty for not giving his son a better life, but he needs to know the truth about his son’s death. His lawyer contacts Moxie Castin, a lawyer who often hires Parker to conduct investigations. Moxie convinces Parker to talk to Scott’s father. Parker suspects Scott died an accidental death but agrees to poke around.
At about the time Scott died, a young woman named Mallory Norton disappeared. Since Mallory lives in the same part of the state, Parker suspects a connection between the two cases.
Other crimes of consequence are committed by a group of serial killers. Four men, operating in teams of two, abduct young women and take turns raping and torturing them before disposing of their bodies. They operate under strict rules, including limiting their hobby to one abduction per year, always at an untraceable location far from home. Some of the men seem to have a connection to Spero and at least one of them hasn’t adhered to the rules that keep them safe.
Connolly always tells an engaging story. The four villains are creeps but Connolly gives them complete lives, replete with the ordinariness that allows their criminal personas to go undetected. They try to victimize women whose disappearance won’t be noticed, but their lives begin to unravel when two of them kidnap the wrong woman.
Series fans will enjoy Parker’s banter with his friends Lewis and Angel, two hard men who blend sensitivity and love with loyalty and merciless judgment. While the plot is carefully constructed, I’m not sure readers who haven’t followed the series will find value in another story of serial killers that has too many predictable elements.
Fortunately, the story isn’t entirely predictable. I believe this is the first novel I’ve read that imagines a ghost hiring a hitman. Still, I was underwhelmed by the novel’s ending as Parker and his friends decide to confront the supernatural being that wants them all dead.
As a Connolly fan, I recommend the novel to other Connolly fans. To crime fiction fans who haven’t followed Connolly, I recommend starting at the beginning and working your way through the series. A River Red with Blood isn’t the best Charlie Parker novel, but a familiarity with the characters will likely enhance appreciation of Parker’s latest brush with violent criminals and supernatural entities.
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