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THE AMATEUR HISTORIAN

The cliffhanger endings Rick’s adventures supply are likely to distract readers along with the Yorkshire constabulary. Yet...

The motive for a Yorkshire girl’s disappearance lies buried with another local girl a century dead.

Ten years after a domestic-violence case gone horribly wrong drove him from the police force, Rick Rounder is back from far-off Queensland. Accompanied by his bemused black girlfriend Naomi, he’s determined to lay his ghosts and make his way by hanging out his shingle as a private eye. Chief Inspector Sam Rounder, who wouldn’t be likely to welcome his baby brother back home in any event, has his hands full with the kidnapping of Polly Markham, snatched from outside her house by a man who killed the family dog. Even when the self-styled amateur historian identifies himself in a stunningly unforeseeable scene, his confession only deepens the mystery: He’s taken Polly because he “wanted to put things right” for the death of nine-year-old Esme Percy in 1901. Can Sam Rounder’s force find Polly before she’s as dead as her spectral twin? Their investigation would be a lot simpler if Rick Rounder’s very first case, the routine shadowing of Will Wistow’s adulterous wife to gather evidence for a divorce, didn’t keep getting him into waves of trouble from unexpected sources.

The cliffhanger endings Rick’s adventures supply are likely to distract readers along with the Yorkshire constabulary. Yet Cole’s debut novel rings so many fresh changes on the echoes-of-the-past thriller that even more readers will welcome the series it introduces.

Pub Date: July 6, 2010

ISBN: 978-0-312-58659-1

Page Count: 240

Publisher: Minotaur

Review Posted Online: June 3, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2010

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SPLIT SECOND

Assembly-line legal thriller: flat characters, lame scene-setting, and short but somehow interminable action: a lifeless...

Two defrocked Secret Service Agents investigate the assassination of one presidential candidate and the kidnapping of another.

Baldacci (The Christmas Train, 2002, etc.) sets out with two plot strands. The first begins when something distracts Secret Service Agent Sean King and during that “split second,” presidential candidate Clyde Ritter is shot dead. King takes out the killer, but that’s not enough to save his reputation with the Secret Service. He retires and goes on to do often tedious but nonetheless always lucrative work (much like a legal thriller such as this) at a law practice. Plot two begins eight years later when another Secret Service Agent, Michelle Maxwell, lets presidential candidate John Bruno out of her sight for a few minutes at a wake for one of his close associates. He goes missing. Now Maxwell, too, gets in dutch with the SS. Though separated by time, the cases are similar and leave several questions unanswered. What distracted King at the rally? Bruno had claimed his friend’s widow called him to the funeral home. The widow (one of the few characters here to have any life) says she never called Bruno. Who set him up? Who did a chambermaid at Ritter’s hotel blackmail? And who is the man in the Buick shadowing King’s and Maxwell’s every move? King is a handsome, rich divorce, Maxwell an attractive marathon runner. Will they join forces and find each other kind of, well, appealing? But of course. The two former agents traverse the countryside, spinning endless hypotheses before the onset, at last, of a jerrybuilt conclusion that begs credibility and offers few surprises.

Assembly-line legal thriller: flat characters, lame scene-setting, and short but somehow interminable action: a lifeless concoction.

Pub Date: Sept. 30, 2003

ISBN: 0-446-53089-1

Page Count: 406

Publisher: N/A

Review Posted Online: June 24, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2003

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RAZOR GIRL

Relax, enjoy, and marvel anew at the power of unbridled fictional invention.

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Rejoice, fans of American madness who’ve sought fulfillment in political reportage. South Florida’s master farceur (Skink—No Surrender, 2014, etc.) is back to reassure you that fiction is indeed stranger than truth.

Even though a prefatory note indicates that both the come-hither title and the stuff about giant Gambian pouched rats are rooted in reality, no one but Hiaasen could have dreamed up the complications arising from the collision of Merry Mansfield with talent agent Lane Coolman—a literal collision, since she rams his rented car while shaving her bikini area in the driver's seat of a Firebird. Make that multiple collisions, since Lane turns out to be only the latest victim of Merry and her partner Zeto’s kidnap-for-hire schemes. In this case, he’s the wrong victim, mistaken for beach-replenishment contractor Martin Trebeaux, whose swindling has put him on the wrong side of Calzone crime family capo Dominick "Big Noogie" Aeola. Since Coolman’s being held captive, he can’t be on hand to walk his client Buck Nance, the reality star of Bayou Brethren, though a personal appearance at the Parched Pirate, and Buck goes off script into a racist rant that sparks a demonstration and sends him fleeing, though he's still capable of inspiring Benny Krill, a murderous apprentice racist who dreams of joining him on his show. After laboring in vain to persuade Jon David Ampergrodt, his boss at Platinum Artists Management, as well as Merry and Zeto that he’s worth ransoming, Coolman escapes, but it doesn’t matter: he’s still confined in the zoo that’s Key West, where liability lawyer Brock Richardson’s fiancee loses the $200,000 ring he didn’t bother to resize after his fatter former fiancee returned it, and when his neighbor, health inspector Andrew Yancy, discovers it, he hides it in the hummus in the hope that an indefinite search for the bauble will stall Richardson’s plan to build a McMansion that will obstruct Yancy’s sea view. Etc. How can Hiaasen possibly tie together all this monkey business in the end? His delirious plotting is so fine-tuned that preposterous complications that would strain lesser novelists fit right into his antic world.

Relax, enjoy, and marvel anew at the power of unbridled fictional invention.

Pub Date: Sept. 6, 2016

ISBN: 978-0-385-34974-1

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Knopf

Review Posted Online: June 21, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2016

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