font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif" size="-1"bThe Barnes Noble Review/b/fontbriJanuary 1998/ibrbr iFallen Angelsp/i/font With IAngels Flight,/I Michael Connelly, the iNew York Times/i bestselling author of IBlood Work/I and IThe Poet,/I returns to the bread-and-butter character -- the tough, no-holds-barred LAPD detective Harry Bosch -- who has virtually catapulted Connelly to the top of the gritty, police-procedural-thriller heap. Loaded with electrifying sequences, intriguing "NYPD Blue"-like big-city politics and procedures, and a killer plot stacked with high-speed twists and turns that'll keep you guessing until its very end, IAngels Flight/I is an intense and terrific read. p Although IAngels Flight/I was my first Connelly experience, I guarantee that it will not be my last. This novel really impressed me. Set in Los Angeles, the town where high-profile trials such as the O. J. Simpson and Rodney King affairs have captivated and scarred the nation in the '90s, IAngels Flight/I serves up a compelling and highly sensitive double-murder investigation that has L.A.'s disgruntled black community setting its sights on the LAPD. When a controversial black lawyer (