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TOM CLANCY'S OP-CENTER

FALLOUT

Op-Center fans will find this a worthy entry in the series.

America’s relations with China get testy in the Tom Clancy industry’s 22nd Op-Center thriller.

Sen. Yvonne Malo and three fellow astronauts circle the Earth in the Phoenix One until suddenly everything goes wrong. They lose all power and communications, the vehicle burns, and they all die. China has fired the first shot in what could be a war in space. It doesn't take long for Americans to figure out that the Chinese have sabotaged Phoenix One in retaliation for the American abduction of a Chinese engineer who was working on a hypersonic missile program. Now President John Wright looks for a way to retaliate without escalating too far. This calls for the Op-Center, a strike force that takes on highly secretive missions for the president of the United States. China wants their man back, and they demand that Adm. Chase Williams make the delivery. Hmm, that sounds suspicious. Yes, they kidnap him to use him as bait to destroy Black Wasp, a subgroup of five members of Op-Center that does tough, on-the-ground dirty work at the behest of the president. As with all the novels that are part of the Op-Center formula, this one is filled with well-plotted action and strong characters. In captivity, Adm. Williams does himself credit as an American citizen, but can Black Wasp rescue him? Or will the Chinese destroy them all? When a Black Wasp suffers a heavy personal loss, readers might expect a greater showing of grief. Yet amid all the violence and turmoil, there is an unexpected grace note at the end. The writing style has not changed since The Hunt for Red October—eminently readable and enjoyable but with no memorable dialogue. More importantly, this story reflects America’s ongoing struggle to maintain its place in the world and China’s ongoing effort to surpass us. It’s a world where the U.S. is imperfect but essentially just, no victory is ever complete, and the sequels keep coming.

Op-Center fans will find this a worthy entry in the series.

Pub Date: May 30, 2023

ISBN: 9781250868725

Page Count: 336

Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin

Review Posted Online: April 10, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2023

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ANATOMY OF AN ALIBI

This mystery’s promising premise bogs down in an overloaded cast.

When one woman takes on another’s identity to uncover a crime, they both become suspects in a murder.

Aubrey Price and Camille Bayliss come from different worlds, only crossing paths because of the discovery that Camille’s husband, powerful lawyer Ben Bayliss, is hiding something terrible that affects them both. As the novel opens, Aubrey is driving Camille’s Range Rover, then teetering into a bar on Camille’s high heels, with Camille’s dress and credit cards and a wig that mimics Camille’s hair, pretending to be her because Ben tracks his wife’s every move and expenditure, and Camille wants to create a smokescreen while she sneaks into his office in search of evidence of that unnamed secret. But the scheme goes awry, and the women become each other’s alibis after Camille finds Ben murdered in their home. The first part of the book builds suspense and misdirection well, with Aubrey and Ben’s straight-arrow partner, Hank Landry, serving as first-person observers in some chapters while others track Camille. She’s a wealthy and privileged woman but not a happy one, stuck under the thumbs of her husband and her tyrannical father, Randall Everett, who pretty much runs their small Louisiana town. Aubrey was orphaned as a teen when her parents died in a car crash and has proudly fended for herself ever since, coming to depend on her four roommates, who have become friends. But as the cast of characters grows, it seems as if almost everyone in town has a motive for killing Ben, and the piling up of suspects and movements among different timelines can sometimes be confusing. And it all comes to a frustrating end when, after a whole school of red herrings, the solution to Ben’s murder arrives out of far left field.

This mystery’s promising premise bogs down in an overloaded cast.

Pub Date: Jan. 13, 2026

ISBN: 9780593834459

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Pamela Dorman/Viking

Review Posted Online: Dec. 10, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2026

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THE ONLY ONE LEFT

An entertaining thriller if you can give yourself over to its sillier plot devices.

Sager returns with his take on a gothic whodunit set on the coast of Maine.

The year is 1983. Kit McDeere is a disgraced home caregiver who has one chance to redeem herself: She's assigned to look after the ailing, elderly Lenora Hope, a local Lizzie Borden figure. Back in 1929, Lenora allegedly murdered her parents and sister, and now, along with her remaining staff, she resides at Hope’s End, the Gothic mansion on Maine’s crumbling cliffs where the murders took place. Lenora can't speak following a series of strokes, but with Kit’s help, she can type, and she wants to tell her story once and for all, confiding in Kit what happened on the night of the infamous murders. The novel moves between Kit’s narration in the present and Lenora’s typewritten account of her life leading up to the incident. Early on, the novel evokes such genre classics as “The Fall of the House of Usher” and Rebecca, establishing a moody atmosphere and intriguingly suspicious characters. However, this novel lacks the psychological realism of its influences. Sager doesn’t play with gothic tropes so much as he simply traffics in them. The first half of the book is tense and propulsive, but in later chapters the narrative takes so many outlandish turns so quickly that it borders on camp. Characters act in ways that are clichéd and implausible, and they are given cartoonish dialogue to match their behavior. Villains confess easily, in long speeches that strain credulity, and a subplot around paternity takes on the flavor of a telenovela. Multiple scenes involve characters emerging from doorways to reveal they were there all along. (Gasp!) That said, the novel reads quickly and provides a thrilling, if goofy, ride for those with a high tolerance for plot hijinks and a fondness for Guillermo del Toro’s Crimson Peak.

An entertaining thriller if you can give yourself over to its sillier plot devices.

Pub Date: June 20, 2023

ISBN: 9780593183229

Page Count: 400

Publisher: Dutton

Review Posted Online: April 24, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2023

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