by Hassan Riaz ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 26, 2021
An intricately plotted and fast-paced thriller from a medical expert who knows the territory.
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A deadly virus plagues the planet, and the only effective vaccine may never see the light of day in this dystopian medical thriller from Riaz.
In a nod to Nazi physician Josef Mengele, the infamous Angel of Death, the “menglavirus” makes Covid seem like the common cold, and it threatens to wipe out the entire world with its fatal strains. A small pharmaceutical lab called Riogenrix has released to the public an effective vaccine thanks to the genius of Dr. Harrison Boyd; meanwhile, big pharma’s efforts at inventing a vaccine have failed completely. Yet suddenly the FDA mysteriously decides to block the continuing trial process of Riogenrix’s vaccine. Coincidentally, powerful Sen. Scott Spaulding has inserted himself into the process: He has his eye on the White House, naturally. He wants to use the vaccine to further his political ambitions. And then there’s Gregory Miller, failed doctor and pharmaceutical spy who may or may not be working for Spaulding. Miller is brilliant but bitter to the point of insanity. Riaz is a doctor and knows all the expected medical lingo. He’s particularly good at creating rich characters with complex backstories and intriguing private lives: He doesn’t skimp on their human dimensions, which is the mark of a savvy novelist. His hero, Harrison, is a decent man but conflicted because he was forced to emotionally neglect his family while creating the vaccine. Miller’s personal story is that he has nurtured a grudge for over 20 years—and this eats at him every waking hour. All these characters come across as easy to identify with, and the refreshingly original ending is far from the tidy closure that mystery readers have come to expect.
An intricately plotted and fast-paced thriller from a medical expert who knows the territory.Pub Date: Sept. 26, 2021
ISBN: 9780990706335
Page Count: 291
Publisher: Hill Taper Books
Review Posted Online: Jan. 21, 2023
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Jack Clark ‧ RELEASE DATE: Feb. 13, 2024
Readers who know better than to worry about whodunit will hurtle from one seat-of-the-pants ride to the next.
A Chicago taxi driver who’s seen it all gets to see it all again, and then some, in a fast-moving thriller first published in 1996.
To the stand-by rules that govern cab driving in the Windy City—don’t go west, don’t go south, don’t go back, don’t go to Cabrini–Green—a new one has been added: Don’t pick up anyone who might be the person who killed three inner-city drivers and has now branched out to the suburbs with a fourth victim. The thing is, when he stops to pick up someone who’s flagged him down, night-shift cabbie Eddie Miles, who’s already got the jitters from the night he found teenage prostitute Relita Brown brutally stabbed in a deserted street and saved her life by calling the cops, never knows where any trip will take him. Maybe his passengers will throw up in his cab. Maybe they’ll try to stiff him for the fare. Maybe they’ll lead him to a tavern, where he’ll spend the hours till closing time drinking with strangers while his cab’s meter chugs along profitably in the parking lot. Maybe they’ll give him legal advice about renegotiating the ruinous divorce settlement that allowed his ex-wife to move to California with their daughter, whom he hasn’t seen for seven years. Maybe they’ll pull a gun on him and tell him his number’s up. Clark plots like a driver with tunnel vision who can’t see beyond the next curve, writes the clipped prose of a caffeine-fueled insomniac, and records every fare and tip, or lack thereof, with the precision of a bookkeeper.
Readers who know better than to worry about whodunit will hurtle from one seat-of-the-pants ride to the next.Pub Date: Feb. 13, 2024
ISBN: 9781803367477
Page Count: 224
Publisher: Hard Case Crime
Review Posted Online: Dec. 6, 2023
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2024
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by Jack Clark
by John Grisham ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 25, 2016
Yes, it’s formula. Yes, it’s not as gritty an exercise in swamp mayhem as Hiaasen, Buchanan, or Crews might turn in. But,...
“I started dreaming of getting rich, which, in Florida anyway, can lead to serious trouble”: another blockbuster in the making from Grisham (Rogue Lawyer, 2015, etc.), the ascended master of the legal procedural.
If justice is blind, it is also served, in theory, by incorruptible servants. Emphasize “in theory,” for as Grisham’s latest opens, judicial investigator Lacy Stoltz is confronted with the unpleasant possibility that a highly regarded judge may be on the take. The charge comes, discreetly, from a former lawyer–turned-jailbird-turned-lawyer again, who spins out a seemingly improbable tale of racketeering that weds the best elements of Gulf Coast society with the worst, from the brilliant legal minds of Tallahassee to some very unpleasant lads once styled as the Catfish Mafia, now reborn in an alt-version, the Coast Mafia. Lacy’s brief is to find out just how rotten the rotten judge is—and the answer is plenty. Naturally, this knowledge is not acquired without cost; the body count rises, bad things happen to good people, and for a time, at least, the villains get away with murder and more. Grisham has never been strong on characterization: Lacy, we learn, is content to be single, “to live alone, to sleep in the center of the bed, to clean up only after herself,” and so forth, but beyond that the reader doesn’t get much sense of what drives her to put herself in the way of flying bullets and sneering counsel: “His associate was Ian Archer, an unsmiling sort who refused to shake hands with anyone and reeked of surliness.” In laid-back Florida? Indeed, and in Grisham’s busy hands, a lot of players come and go, some fated to sleep with the manatees.
Yes, it’s formula. Yes, it’s not as gritty an exercise in swamp mayhem as Hiaasen, Buchanan, or Crews might turn in. But, like eating a junk burger, even though you probably shouldn’t, it’s plenty satisfying.Pub Date: Oct. 25, 2016
ISBN: 978-0-385-54119-0
Page Count: 384
Publisher: Doubleday
Review Posted Online: Oct. 18, 2016
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 2016
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