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NEVER

On one level, it’s great entertainment; on another, a window into a sobering possibility.

A complex, scary thriller that feels too plausible for comfort.

Republican President Pauline Green is trying to steer the United States through a dangerous world. China spends billions in Africa to extend its global influence, while North African countries like Chad are beset by criminals and terrorists. But that’s secondary to the real problem: Rebels in North Korea try to overthrow the Communist dynasty and reunite the North and South, which scares the bejesus out of China. They fear the peninsula’s reunification, “a euphemism for takeover by the capitalist West.” The Chinese believe America and Europe want to destroy China “and would stop at nothing," so the last thing they need is a bordering nation with West-leaning sympathies. And domestically, Green faces “blowhard” wannabe president Sen. James Moore, who thinks there’s no point in having nukes if you won’t use them. Even her personal life is complicated: Her husband “was a good lover, but she had never wanted to tear his clothes off with her teeth.” In fact, the first spouses are quietly drifting apart. Yet she “could not fall in love” with another man. “It would be a hurricane, a train crash, a nuclear bomb.” Speaking of which, both superpowers have ironclad commitments to protect their allies, even if some crazy third parties get their hands on nuclear weapons. Will China and the U.S. be drawn into all-out war neither wants? This novel deals with the same great-power issues as Elliot Ackerman and James Stavridis’ recent 2034, and both will give you the willies. Follett could have cut back on the North African subplot and delivered a tighter yarn, but then you mightn’t have learned that “a helicopter glides like a grand piano.” Anyway, that’s Follett: You’ll be so absorbed in the story threads that you’ll follow them anywhere—and you’ll suddenly realize you’ve read hundreds of pages.

On one level, it’s great entertainment; on another, a window into a sobering possibility.

Pub Date: Nov. 9, 2021

ISBN: 978-0-59-330001-5

Page Count: 816

Publisher: Viking

Review Posted Online: July 9, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2021

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BAD, BAD SEYMOUR BROWN

Only for die-hard Isaacs fans, who will get the title’s Jim Croce reference.

In this follow-up to Takes One To Know One (2019), an ex–FBI agent and her retired cop father team up again to solve a homicide cold case.

Still suffering PTSD symptoms from the last FBI case she consulted on, Corie Geller has settled into a quiet post-pandemic life on Long Island as an “underemployed suburban wife and mother” with her husband, daughter, and her Queens-based parents, who moved into the guest suite during the initial lockdown. But when Corie’s father, former NYPD detective Dan Schottland, is contacted by April Brown, the sole survivor of a two-decades-old unsolved arson that killed her parents, Corie gets pulled into helping him investigate a potential murder attempt on April—someone driving a dark SUV tried to run down the film studies professor on the Rutgers University campus. Was the attack related to the murders of Seymour Brown, a brutal man who laundered money for the Russian mob, and his wife, Kim? More than 40 years ago Isaacs burst onto the publishing scene with the bestselling Compromising Positions, a comic mystery mocking suburban mores. Unfortunately, she breaks no new ground here; her dull storyline is slowed down by the constant observational digressions of the characters. Everyone talks, talks, talks, and they don’t always stick to the point, as in the conversation about Seymour’s memorial service, which devolves into a comparison of funeral rites among different ethnic and religious groups, much to Dan’s (and the reader’s) annoyance. While true to life, this doesn’t make for stimulating reading. Likewise, Isaacs’ noted snarky humor now feels stale. The action only picks up in the book’s final third, and by then the reader doesn’t much care.

Only for die-hard Isaacs fans, who will get the title’s Jim Croce reference.

Pub Date: May 2, 2023

ISBN: 9780802159069

Page Count: 400

Publisher: Atlantic Monthly

Review Posted Online: March 13, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2023

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GODSPEED

An exceptional tale, once it gets going, of what money can do to those who need it.

A trophy house, a struggling construction company, and an impossible deadline frame this tense story of greed and friendship.

Bart, Cole, and Teddy, blue-collar buddies since Utah childhoods, are now pushing 40 and business partners just getting by on small jobs in Wyoming’s Jackson Hole valley. Their prospects brighten when a wealthy West Coast lawyer named Gretchen offers them the contract to finish her eight-figure house in progress in the mountains outside town. It’s a lot of money for the job itself and comes with a hefty bonus if the men meet her deadline. That’s one problem, because she wants to move in within four months, a near impossibility given the work involved. There’s also the question of why the previous contractors didn’t stick with such a lucrative gig, not to mention the man who died in an accident on the site. But a six-figure bonus crushes a lot of misgivings. For almost half the book, Butler dwells on the beauty of the house and site, the builder’s dreams, the deadline’s pressure, the haves and have-nots as “more and more out-of-state money poured into their quaint little ski town.” The pace drags with repetition and lack of surprise. Fortunately the second half shifts into another gear, characters evolve amid the stress and several neat twists, and the action moves almost like a thriller to a stunning climax. As in his previous three novels, Butler brings sympathy and insight to the familiar rituals and dynamics of male friendship. He might have done more with Gretchen. She has an intriguing backstory that doesn’t develop, and while she’s an impressive force when onstage, the plot mostly keeps her in the wings.

An exceptional tale, once it gets going, of what money can do to those who need it.

Pub Date: July 27, 2021

ISBN: 978-0-593-19041-8

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Putnam

Review Posted Online: May 4, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2021

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