by David Freed ‧ RELEASE DATE: Aug. 15, 2015
Logan's fourth adventure is a nifty detective story with juicy writing and a very likable hero.
A wry spy goes undercover in modern-day Vietnam to solve a murder with roots in the failed war.
Hanoi cops drag a corpse out of the river, and one of them recognizes the dead man from the newspapers. A former guard at the infamous Hanoi Hilton, he's the one American pilots nicknamed Mr. Wonderful, "because he wasn't." Could it be a coincidence that the victim recently had a tense reunion with three American vets, former Vietnam POWS, who had flown back to Hanoi seeking closure with the prison guard who tortured them? The State Department decides that a covert investigation is needed and asks former fighter pilot and freelance assassin Cordell Logan (Voodoo Ridge, 2014, etc.), who's making a good living with flying lessons and airborne tours, to conduct it. Logan, who narrates with tongue firmly in cheek, goes undercover as a psychologist named Bob Barker, a name that doesn't give him much confidence in Max, his handler, who created his new identity. Since the three former POWs, Cohen, Halladay, and Stoneburner, present a united front in claiming their collective innocence, Logan/Barker proceeds gingerly. The nights are hard, as the death of his beloved ex-wife, Savannah, six months ago still burns. Logan's probing gets him the wrong kind of attention, and local authorities want him to back off, but he persists at great personal risk. Insurance money and rape press him to look closer to home for a killer, but is he being misled?
Logan's fourth adventure is a nifty detective story with juicy writing and a very likable hero.Pub Date: Aug. 15, 2015
ISBN: 978-1-57962-399-9
Page Count: 280
Publisher: Permanent Press
Review Posted Online: June 16, 2015
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2015
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by Alice Feeney ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 13, 2018
Though the novel eventually begins to sag under the weight of all its plot elements, fans of the psychological thriller will...
A pathological liar, a woman in a coma, a childhood diary, an imaginary friend, an evil sister—this is an unreliable-narrator novel with all the options.
"A lot of people would think I have a dream job, but nightmares are dreams too." Was it only a week ago Amber Reynolds thought her job as an assistant radio presenter was a nightmare? Now it's Dec. 26 (or Boxing Day, because we're in England), and she's lying in a hospital bed seemingly in a coma, fully conscious but unable to speak or move. We won't learn what caused her condition until the end of the book, and the journey to that revelation will be complicated by many factors. One: She doesn't remember her accident. Two: As she confesses immediately, "Sometimes I lie." Three: It's a story so complicated that even after the truth is exposed, it will take a while to get it straight in your head. As Amber lies in bed recalling the events of the week that led to her accident, several other narrative threads kick up in parallel. In the present, she's visited in her hospital room by her husband, a novelist whose affections she has come to doubt. Also her sister, with whom she shares a dark secret, and a nasty ex-boyfriend whom she ran into in the street the week before. He works as a night porter at the hospital, giving him unfortunate access to her paralyzed but not insensate body. Interwoven with these sections are portions of a diary, recounting unhappy events that happened 25 years earlier from a 9-year-old child's point of view. Feeney has loaded her maiden effort with possibilities for twists and reveals—possibly more than strictly necessary—and they hit like a hailstorm in the last third of the book. Blackmail, forgery, secret video cameras, rape, poisoning, arson, and failing to put on a seat belt all play a role.
Though the novel eventually begins to sag under the weight of all its plot elements, fans of the psychological thriller will enjoy this ambitious debut.Pub Date: March 13, 2018
ISBN: 978-1-250-14484-3
Page Count: 272
Publisher: Flatiron Books
Review Posted Online: Feb. 19, 2018
Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2018
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by Neal Stephenson ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 4, 1999
Detail-packed, uninhibitedly discursive, with dollops of heavy-handed humor, and set forth in the author’s usual...
Stephenson’s prodigious new yarn (after The Diamond Age, 1995, etc.) whirls from WWII cryptography and top-secret bullion shipments to a present-day quest by computer whizzes to build a data haven amid corporate shark-infested waters, by way of multiple present-tense narratives overlaid with creeping paranoia.
In 1942, phenomenally talented cryptanalyst Lawrence Waterhouse is plucked from the ruins of Pearl Harbor and posted to Bletchley Park, England, center of Allied code-breaking operations. Problem: having broken the highest German and Japanese codes, how can the Allies use the information without revealing by their actions that the codes have been broken? Enter US Marine Raider Bobby Shaftoe, specialist in cleanup details, statistical adjustments, and dirty jobs. In the present, meanwhile, Waterhouse’s grandson, the computer-encryption whiz Randy, tries to set up a data haven in Southeast Asia, one secure from corporate rivals, nosy governments, and inquisitive intelligence services. He teams up with Shaftoe’s stunning granddaughter, Amy, while pondering mysterious, e-mails from root@eruditorum.org, who’s developed a weird but effective encoding algorithm. Everything, of course, eventually links together. During WWII, Waterhouse and Shaftoe investigate a wrecked U-boat, discovering a consignment of Chinese gold bars, and sheets of a new, indecipherable code. Code-named Arethusa, this material ends up with Randy, presently beset by enemies like his sometime backer, The Dentist. He finds himself in a Filipino jail accused of drug smuggling, along with Shaftoe’s old associate, Enoch Root (root@eruditorum.org!). Since his jailers give him his laptop back, he knows someone’s listening. So he uses his computing skills to confuse the eavesdroppers, decodes Arethusa, and learns the location of a huge hoard of gold looted from Asia by the Japanese.
Detail-packed, uninhibitedly discursive, with dollops of heavy-handed humor, and set forth in the author’s usual vainglorious style; still, there’s surprisingly little actual plot. And the huge chunks of baldly technical material might fascinate NSA chiefs, computer nerds, and budding entrepreneurs, but ordinary readers are likely to balk: showtime, with lumps.Pub Date: May 4, 1999
ISBN: 0-380-97346-4
Page Count: 928
Publisher: Avon/HarperCollins
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 1999
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