by N. SCOTT STEDMAN ‧ RELEASE DATE: N/A
An imaginative tale with nonstop action that will delight techies of all ages.
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A girl searching for her past finds herself in the right place at the right time in this debut middle-grade tech thriller.
Mouse Gamma is a 12-year-old girl with a bad attitude. She really can’t be blamed; she’s an orphan who never knew her parents. As smart as she is, she seems to never learn her lesson, which makes her all the more engaging. After getting the boot from yet another foster home, she awaits the inevitable return to juvenile hall, but something is different this time. Caught hacking into the database of computer giant Rayburn Tech in search of her birthparents’ identities, Mouse never expected to be remanded to Rickum Academy, a prestigious tech school for computer savants. Attending Rickum may be the biggest break of her unhappy life. She can’t figure out who offered this favor, but she doesn’t let it get in the way of her sarcasm or her suspicions that she was given a scholarship so she could be watched. Technology is everywhere in Stedman’s inventive tale. It is presented with just enough information to keep techies intrigued but not too much to overwhelm the uninitiated. The author even makes writing code sound like fun. Tech is no problem for Mouse, who aces the entrance exam. This computer-hacking prodigy should be destined for mainstream success, but that’s not what she’s after. She’d rather emulate rebel hacker Erik Walters than the influential but controlling tech tycoon Trent Rayburn (both renowned alums). Mouse believes that Rayburn is the man “who created the system that stuck me in foster homes my whole life. The powerful. The elite. The same ones who are keeping me from figuring out who my parents are.” Life gets complicated when unknown forces attack Rickum’s students and faculty. Other incidents point to a cyber-apocalypse, which coincides with Walters’ escaping from prison—and Mouse’s arriving at Rickum, putting her under the scrutiny of the bullying professor Erwin Frink. Because of the uncertainty caused by the rumored doomsday, Botori, the annual hacking contest, is canceled. In this engrossing story, that doesn’t stop Mouse, who believes that continuing to play could help her find what she’s looking for.
An imaginative tale with nonstop action that will delight techies of all ages.Pub Date: N/A
ISBN: N/A
Page Count: 300
Publisher: River Grove Books
Review Posted Online: May 17, 2022
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Jeffrey Archer ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 7, 2006
Gradually, globe-hopping flights and substitutions of a hilariously unconvincing forgery for the real van Gogh start to take...
Now that he’s completed his trilogy of prison diaries (2003–05), Lord Archer, out on the street again, returns to his old habits with this tale of a disgraced art expert’s attempt to thwart her villainous banker boss’s plot to fleece a fine old English family of van Gogh’s Self-portrait with Bandaged Ear.
The morning after Lady Victoria Wentworth has her throat cut before she can follow Dr. Anna Petrescu’s advice about selling off her van Gogh to cover her debt to Fenston Finance, Bryce Fenston fires Anna for offering the advice. Getting sacked is the best thing that could have happened to her, because while she’s waiting for an elevator to take her down to the first floor of the World Trade Center for the last time, the building is rocked by a fiery explosion. Yes, it’s 9/11, and while Archer is using the disaster as colorful background, Anna’s taking advantage of the chaos to disappear, presumed dead. She plans to fly to England and ask Arabella Wentworth, Victoria’s twin and heir, to help her steal the canvas, now technically Fenston’s property, before Fenston’s lieutenant, disbarred lawyer Karl Leapman, can pick it up. Knowing that a terrorist bombing goes only so far, Archer (Sons of Fortune, 2003, etc.) ladles on extra complications. An FBI agent who’s had his eye on Fenston gets on Anna’s trail. Her phone calls to her friend Tina Forster, Fenston’s assistant, puts her irate ex-boss close behind. The knife-wielding assassin who killed Victoria Wentworth goes after Anna as well.
Gradually, globe-hopping flights and substitutions of a hilariously unconvincing forgery for the real van Gogh start to take the place of plot developments, and somewhere between Bucharest and London, most of the suspense evaporates, though there are still a hundred pages left to run.Pub Date: March 7, 2006
ISBN: 0-312-35372-3
Page Count: 384
Publisher: St. Martin's
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 2005
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by Gerald Seymour ‧ RELEASE DATE: Feb. 1, 2012
Intricately crafted and clocklike in its controlled release of psychological and geopolitical tension.
Embedded as a driver in the London home of Russian money launderer Josef Goldmann, undercover officer Jonathan Carrick’s assignment is yielding no useful information.
But when intel regarding the sale of a portable nuke makes Goldmann of interest to MI5, the stakes rise. Carrick foils an apparent assassination attempt and finds himself finagled into Goldmann’s trust just as they hook up with the broker, mafia heavy Reuven Weissberg whose lineage, nihilism and innate distrustfulness descend from a survivor of the Sobibor extermination camp. As a pawn in the hands of the brusque, unorthodox Christopher Lawson, 38 years an officer with the Secret Intelligence Service, Carrick walks the high wire sans safety net, enduring ruthless tests by mafia thugs. Meanwhile two disgruntled former Soviet soldiers excavate the weapon from its hiding place in a vegetable patch and set off in a decrepit car on a bizarre, often Quixotic odyssey, facing border crossings and inspections with the weapon hidden loosely under a tarp. The buyer, an Islamic militant operative known as “The Crow,” has lined up an expert to verify the device’s authenticity, a nuclear scientist let go from his position for family connection to the tribal areas in Pakistan. Themes of disenfranchisement breeding treachery and buried evils inevitably resurfacing permeate this latest, balletic thriller from Seymour (Walking Dead, 2008, etc.), whose sense of historical underpinnings, earned from years of covering terrorism as a journalist, elevate this tale to the heights of the genre, offering sprung steel suspense and sobering depictions of a world tilting on its nuclear fulcrum from Cold War deadlock to post 9-11 volatility. As the threat of nuclear terrorism looms, Carrick’s psychological state threatens collapse. Weissberg leads him to the site of one holocaust—will it become birthplace of another?
Intricately crafted and clocklike in its controlled release of psychological and geopolitical tension.Pub Date: Feb. 1, 2012
ISBN: 978-1-59020-699-7
Page Count: 432
Publisher: Overlook
Review Posted Online: Dec. 27, 2011
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2012
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