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The Night Bird (Frost Easton, #1) par Brian…
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The Night Bird (Frost Easton, #1) (original 2017; édition 2017)

par Brian Freeman

Séries: Frost Easton (1)

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3922064,950 (3.4)7
When a series of bizarre deaths rock San Francisco, homicide detective Frost Eaton discovers a connection that leads him to psychiatrist Francesca Stein. Dr. Stein's controversial therapy helps people erase their most terrifying memories -- and all of the victims were her patients. As Frost and Dr. Stein carry out their investigation, the case becomes increasingly personal -- and dangerous. Long-submerged secrets surface as someone called the Night Bird taunts the pair with cryptic messages pertaining to the deaths. As the body count rises and the Night Bird circles ever closer, a dedicated cop and a brilliant doctor race to solve the puzzle before a cunning killer claims another victim.… (plus d'informations)
Membre:avengewash
Titre:The Night Bird (Frost Easton, #1)
Auteurs:Brian Freeman
Info:Thomas & Mercer, Kindle Edition, 364 pages
Collections:E-Book, Owned, Read, Votre bibliothèque, Liste de livres désirés, En cours de lecture, À lire, Lus mais non possédés, Favoris
Évaluation:****
Mots-clés:Aucun

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The Night Bird par Brian Freeman (2017)

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» Voir aussi les 7 mentions

Affichage de 1-5 de 20 (suivant | tout afficher)
The storyline is interesting and pulled me right in. The closer I got to the end of the book, the more engrossed I became. But what really compelled me to read this book was the writing style. I read a lot of Kindle samples of books that I don't order. Mostly because the style of writing isn't appealing for a variety of reasons -- too wordy/descriptive being the biggest culprit. I especially enjoy a good mystery with suspense. The descriptions, conversation, thoughts, and plot were balanced in this story. It kept moving. Didn't bog down. It has a puzzling magnetic draw.
  b00kdarling87 | Jan 7, 2024 |
An introduction to Frost Easton, SFPD Homicide. Formerly a non practicing lawyer, Alcatraz tour guide, & charter boat captain, he lives in a swanky mansion owned by his adopted cat, Shack. After his sister Katie was murdered he joined the police force and is the "Boy Scout" always following the evidence and dong the right thing. An intriguing case involving a psychiatrist who hypnotizes and erases bad memories for people. A few of her patients have ended up dead and she has gaps in her own memory about her father's death. Frost investigates the strange deaths that include a haunting song, a new friend who wants her phobia erased, the psychiatrist who's hiding something, & a cunning killer who is always one step ahead. Twisty, thrilling, fast paced, & had me guessing until the end to reveal the killer. ( )
  LaneyLegz | Jul 29, 2023 |
I read the second in the Frost series first. Had I read it in order after this one, I would have noticed the psychological connection. In Voice inside, Freeman’s killer was obsessed with a memory and acted on it. Memory is also a prime mover in Night Bird.

Memory is a very tricky thing as we have learned in the past few decades. It’s malleable, easily fooled, and extremely fallible. Ask an eyewitness to an accident how fast a car was going as he went through the stop sign, the witness will implant the image of a stop sign in his memory even though there may not have been one there.
Here a memory expert (Francesca Stein — get it? Frankenstein) uses images to change a client’s remembrance of a traumatic experience in order to eliminate a phobia. She maintains that every time you haul up a memory from the repository in your brain you alter it in some way.

If you are interested in how memory works and its experience in the judicial process I recommend The fallibility of memory in judicial processes: Lessons from the past and their modern consequences Mark Howe and Laure Knott. *

A salient paragraph:
When memory serves as evidence, as it does in many civil and criminal legal proceedings, there are a number of important limitations to the veracity of that evidence. This is because memory does not provide a veridical representation of events as experienced. Rather, what gets encoded into memory is determined by what a person attends to, what they already have stored in memory, their expectations, needs and emotional state. This information is subsequently integrated (consolidated) with other information that has already been stored in a person's long-term, autobiographical memory. What gets retrieved later from that memory is determined by that same multitude of factors that contributed to encoding as well as what drives the recollection of the event. Specifically, what gets retold about an experience depends on whom one is talking to and what the purpose is of remembering that particular event (e.g., telling a friend, relaying an experience to a therapist, telling the police about an event). Moreover, what gets remembered is reconstructed from the remnants of what was originally stored; that is, what we remember is constructed from whatever remains in memory following any forgetting or interference from new experiences that may have occurred across the interval between storing and retrieving a particular experience. Because the contents of our memories for experiences involve the active manipulation (during encoding), integration with pre-existing information (during consolidation), and reconstruction (during retrieval) of that information, memory is, by definition, fallible at best and unreliable at worst.

Lots of plot summaries. No point in me adding another. I suggest reading them in order and I will certainly now move on to the 3rd.
*Memory. 2015 Jul 4; 23(5): 633–656. Published online 2015 Feb 23. doi: 10.1080/09658211.2015.1010709 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4409058/
Elizabeth Loftus gained considerable fame (and fortune) for her research into the fallibility and manipulatability (if that’s a word) of memory.
https://www.amazon.com/Eyewitness-Testimony-With-preface-author/dp/0674287770/re...
https://www.ted.com/talks/elizabeth_loftus_how_reliable_is_your_memory?language=...
An interesting article on Loftus’ research and the Weinstein trial. Physical evidence should always be required in any case involving memory. When you have prosecutors and victim’s rights advocates, all of whom have their own agendas, juries need to be very careful in evaluating eyewitness and memory testimony.
https://www.scribd.com/article/446066265/Expert-Testifies-About-false-Memories-I... ( )
  ecw0647 | Mar 14, 2023 |
A new character, a new city, a new story. I liked but missed reading Minnesota. ( )
  wincheryl | Jun 20, 2022 |
Psychiatrist Frankie Stein meddles with people's memories and fears. She tries to eliminate things that they want to forget and at times substitutes pleasant feelings. There are those including her own father that believe she goes too far. In particular she writes a favourable psychiatric report for someone who is clearly a murderer and gets him out of jail.

But somebody is playing the same game with some of her ex-patients, making them react to triggers like special sounds and music. A number of them have died without warning after psychotic episodes.

Detective Frost Easton meets someone who witnessed a person jumping off a bridge. The episode happened without warning and he is worried that the witness herself may be targeted by a person in a mask that she saw on the bridge.

This plot is a very creepy scenario particularly after it becomes obvious that those who have died are being stalked by someone. ( )
  smik | Feb 11, 2022 |
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Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Brian Freemanauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Barrett, SeanNarrateurauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé

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For Marcia and in loving memory of Thomas Freeman
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Like a shiny Christmas display, red brake lights flashed to life across the five westbound lanes of the San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge.
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When a series of bizarre deaths rock San Francisco, homicide detective Frost Eaton discovers a connection that leads him to psychiatrist Francesca Stein. Dr. Stein's controversial therapy helps people erase their most terrifying memories -- and all of the victims were her patients. As Frost and Dr. Stein carry out their investigation, the case becomes increasingly personal -- and dangerous. Long-submerged secrets surface as someone called the Night Bird taunts the pair with cryptic messages pertaining to the deaths. As the body count rises and the Night Bird circles ever closer, a dedicated cop and a brilliant doctor race to solve the puzzle before a cunning killer claims another victim.

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Brian Freeman est un auteur LibraryThing, c'est-à-dire un auteur qui catalogue sa bibliothèque personnelle sur LibraryThing.

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