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“Redemption” by David Baldacci

Posted by on August 12, 2021

Copyright 2019 by Columbus Rose, Ltd. Published by Grand Central Publishing, New York.

This is #5 in Baldacci’s Memory Man series, but the first of the series that I have read. I always feel that I am missing something when I don’t start at the beginning and I am undoubtedly right. There are many references in this book to events that presumably were the subject of previous books in the series. Missing some of the context certainly diminishes my enjoyment of the book.

But I will give you my take.

Amos Decker, the protagonist and the eponymous “memory man”, suffered a brain injury in college while playing football at Ohio State. As a result of his injury he remembers everything, no matter how minor or how long ago (but not before the injury). This mental abnormality plays a large role in Redemption as Decker – now an FBI agent – is approached by a man that was sent to prison for life for murdering 4 people, largely due to Decker’s investigation – his first homicide case as a police officer 13 years earlier in Burlington OH. The man, who has only weeks to live (he was released from prison due to his impending death) pleads with Decker to clear him as he was innocent.

That very night the man is murdered. Decker searches his infallible memory for any evidence that he screwed up the investigation. He initially can’t see any problem in what the police did 13 years prior, but the fact that the man was murdered (why murder a dying man?) and some doubts about how well he investigated the murders (he never, for example, read the autopsy reports) gnaw at him. He decides to look into it. His suspicion that he somehow messed up drives him to seek redemption (hence the title).

Needless to say, when he starts pulling at the strings, the case begins to unravel. More people start to die. He himself is shot at. It doesn’t take a genius – or a man with infallible memory – to realize the something is rotten in the state of Denmark.

I won’t go into the details of a very twisted plot, but I will tell you that the motive for all the mayhem is very large and very deep. But I couldn’t get past the feeling that it was all a little too contrived. Not realistic. Too many murders in a small town (it reminded me of Cabot Cove, home of Jessica Fletcher of Murder She Wrote – a little town with more murders per capita than Detroit or Miami). So while I enjoyed the book, I can’t rate it highly.

6 out of 10.

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