From across the aisle Harry Bosch looked into his partner's cubicle and watched him conduct his daily ritual of straightening the corners on his stacks of files, clearing the paperwork from the center of his desk and finally placing his rinsed out coffee cup in a desk drawer. Bosch checked his watch and saw it was only three-forty. It seemed that each day, Ignacio Ferras began the ritual a minute or two earlier than the day before. It was only Tuesday, the day after Labor Day weekend and the start of a short week, and already he was edging toward the early exit. This routine was always prompted by a phone call from home. There was a wife waiting there with a with a toddler and a brand new set of twins. She watched the clock like the owner of a candy store watches the fat kids. She needed the break and she needed her husband home to deliver it. Even across the aisle from his partner, and with the four foot sound walls separating workspaces in the new squad room, Bosch could usually hear both sides of the call. It always began with; "When are you coming home?"
Everything in final order at his workstation, Ferras looked over at Bosch.
"Harry, I'm going to take off," he said. "Beat some of the traffic. I have a lot of calls out but they have my cell. No need waiting around for that."
...Bosch just nodded. The issue wasn't really about whether his partner left the job early or what he had earned. It was about his commitment to the mission of homicide work and whether it would be there when they finally got the next call out. Ferras had gone through nine months of physical therapy and rehab before reporting back to the squad room. But in the year since, he had worked cases with a reluctance that was wearing Bosch thin. He wasn't committed and Bosch was tired of waiting on him.
He was also tired of waiting for a fresh kill. It had been four weeks since they'd drawn a case and they were well into the late summer heat. As certain as the Santa Ana winds blowing down out of the mountain passes, Bosch knew a fresh kill was coming.
Ferras stood up and locked his desk. He was taking his jacket off the back of the chair when Bosch saw Larry Gandle step out of his office on the far side of the squad room and head toward them. As the senior man in the partnership, Bosch had been given the first choice of cubicles a month earlier when Robbery-Homicide Division moved over from the decrepit Parker Center to the new Police Administration Building. Most detective threes took the cubicles facing the windows that looked out on City Hall. Bosch had chosen the opposite. He had given his partner the view and took the cube that let him watch what was happening in the squad room. Now he saw the approaching lieutenant and he instinctively knew that his partner wasn't going home early.
Copyright (c) 2009 by Hieronymus, Inc.
Hard-driving police detective Harry Bosch ricochets from the mean streets of L.A. to the shimmering skyline of Hong Kong when a homicide case comes too close to home.
It’s been four weeks since Harry has had a fresh kill to investigate, but now the wait is over. A call from a short-handed bureau takes him to South L.A. where the Chinese owner of a liquor store has been shot to death in an apparent robbery.
Joined by members of the department’s Asian Crimes Unit, Bosch delves into the shooting and soon identifies a suspect, a Los Angeles member of a Hong Kong triad. Before Harry can close in, he gets the word that his teenage daughter, Maddie, who lives in Hong Kong with her mother, has been kidnapped.
Bosch drops everything to journey across the Pacific to find his daughter. Could her disappearance and the case be connected? With the stakes of the investigation so high and so personal, Bosch is up against the clock in a new city, where nothing is at it seems.
Crackling with tension, action and pitch-perfect characterizations, 9 Dragons by multiple award-winning author Michael Connelly pulls out all the stops and a few shocking surprises, pinning you to the page from first to last.
Hardcover: 384 pages
Publisher: Hachette Book Group USA ( October 13, 2009 )
Item #: 95-8408
ISBN: 9780316166317
Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.25 x 0.875 inches
Product Weight: 14.0 ounces

I have read the reviews and hopefully this book will pick up soon. I have read all of Connelly books and love Harry Bosh and usually I read his books in one day. I am on page 106 and it's been 4 weeks and since I picked up the book, I have read 4 other books in between. I'll give it a little more time but this is definately his worst book to date, sorry Michael.
Reviewer: Lynn M
I usually enjoy Harry Bosch stories, but sometimes the action slows to a crawl. This time, the story moves along with enough twists and turns to keep a reader interested all the way through. Nicely done!
Reviewer: Denise
If you are a fan of Connelly/Bosch you have to read the book. That said, it is riddled with cliches even to the end. However there are a couple surprises and the story moves quickly. Ehh. It was ok. Let's see what the next one brings.
Reviewer: Elsie
Not one of Michael Connelly's best books, but still good nonetheless. He keeps his stories moving along nicely with right amount of detail. He's quickly become one of my favorite authors. Definitely worth the read.
Reviewer: Stacey H
I love the character BOSCH. I also love the fact that he places the stories in Los Angeles and with places that you can identify.
This book had great information on China.
Can not wait for the next book!
Reviewer: nancy s