Next book

THE FRAUD

Less funny and more deeply felt than Carter’s first five cases (The Player, 2014, etc.): reliable entertainment that’ll make...

A series of not-so-random carjackings investigated by Newark Eagle-Examiner reporter Carter Ross ends up as a race between the paddy wagon, the shotgun, and the stork.

Carjacking is so deeply ingrained in Newark culture that the locals have developed a tactic called “the Newark Cruise”—not quite stopping at red lights after dark—to avoid it. When banking executive Kevin Tiemeyer gets shot for his Rolex during what should have been a routine carjacking, however, it gets the attention of Tina Thompson, the Eagle-Examiner’s managing editor for local news. And when she sics Carter, father of the baby she’s about to deliver, on the story, he quickly connects it to the remarkably similar carjacking of Nigerian-born businessman Joseph Okeke two weeks earlier. Both men were shot after surrendering their cars, and the two of them, Carter learns with a little digging, had golfed together at the Fanwood Country Club. Naturally, Earl Karlinsky, the Fanwood’s general manager, doesn’t take kindly to Carter’s accusations that Karlinsky himself is setting up his members to be victimized, and Fanwood board member Armando "Doc" Fierro, the fixer’s fixer, succeeds in getting Carter suspended after he crosses the fine line from aggressive journalism to unauthorized spying. But Carter, who’s convinced himself that Dave Gilbert, the director of Chariots for Children, is not only an ex-con, but the head of a thriving chop shop, won’t let go—even though the person who’ll pay the heaviest price for his snooping is his pregnant girlfriend.

Less funny and more deeply felt than Carter’s first five cases (The Player, 2014, etc.): reliable entertainment that’ll make you think twice about your next trip to Newark.

Pub Date: July 7, 2015

ISBN: 978-1-250-06440-0

Page Count: 384

Publisher: Minotaur

Review Posted Online: April 14, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2015

Next book

THE BIG SLEEP

A good one in the tough school, in which private detective Marlowe is hired to investigate a blackmailing and finds himself bucking a well-run gang, several murders, and the D A's office. Hard-boiled, fast paced, plenty of action, some sensationalism. Not for conservatives.

Pub Date: Feb. 5, 1938

ISBN: 0394758285

Page Count: 244

Publisher: Knopf

Review Posted Online: March 23, 2012

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 1938

Next book

WAY DOWN ON THE HIGH LONELY

Looks like Neal Carey, the peripatetic agent of that free- lance justice troop Friends of the Family, will never get back to New York to write his dissertation on Tobias Smollett. This time he's sprung from three years in a Chinese monastery (The Trail to Buddha's Mirror, 1992) only to be sent undercover as a ranch-hand in the Nevada plains to scout out the Sons of Seth, a white- supremacist flock that's his best hope for locating two-year-old Cody McCall, snatched from his Hollywood mother during a paternal weekend. Neal settles in deep, of course, and his ritual ordeals- -having to sell out the rancher who took him in, breaking off his romance with tough schoolmarm Karen Hawley, going up against rotten-apple Cal Strekker, getting ordered to kill his Friendly mentor Joe Graham—are as predictable as the trademark dose of mysticism as the bodies pile up, and as the certainty that when the dust settles, Neal won't be back at school. Winslow's Aryan crazies don't have the threatening solidity of Stephen Greenleaf's (Southern Cross, p. 1102 ), but Neal's latest adventure is full of entertaining derring-do.

Pub Date: Nov. 16, 1993

ISBN: 0-312-09934-7

Page Count: 288

Publisher: St. Martin's

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 1993

Close Quickview