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THE BANCROFT STRATEGY

Never quite comes to a boil, even with all the corpses.

An attractive securities analyst with blood ties to an immensely rich foundation finds herself in mortal danger when she goes snooping into the foundation’s financial matters.

Since the dead need no sleep, readers should be able to count on new Ludlum formula-adventures for the rest of time. The heroine of this multi-death, intercontinental super-thriller is clever but modest Andrea Bancroft, whose late mum had divorced herself completely from her evil ex-husband’s super-rich family when Andrea was a child. Andrea, reared without a penny from the Bancrofts, has been supporting herself doing due diligence for an investment firm specializing in undervalued corporations in need of a slug of capital. Her carefully nurtured career is blown out of the water by an invitation from the Bancroft Foundation and its head, Paul Bancroft, to join the foundation board, a position that makes her an instant millionaire. Meanwhile, miles away from the architecturally astonishing Katonah, N.Y., headquarters of the Bancroft Foundation, 40ish State Department operative Todd Belknap, whose specialty is finding unfindable evildoers, has been galvanized into hyper-action by the snatching and grabbing of his mentor and hero Jared Rinehart. By all indications, if Todd does not find Jared within hours, the man who saved Todd’s bacon more than once will be, well, toast. Andrea, much taken with her relative Paul Bancroft and his brilliant young son, sets about being a conscientious director by digging around in the organization’s records to see how the Bancroft wealth and Paul Bancroft’s megalomaniacal reading of 18th-century philosopher-economist Jeremy Bentham’s utilitarian theories are put to use. Bad idea. Her findings put her in the path of the frantic Todd Belknap, who mistakes her at first for one of the dark forces hiding his buddy. Their mutual attraction grows as they separately and jointly face possible death and torture from the Foundation’s dark side and from Todd’s old State Department cronies.

Never quite comes to a boil, even with all the corpses.

Pub Date: Oct. 17, 2006

ISBN: 0-312-31673-9

Page Count: 544

Publisher: St. Martin's

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2006

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THE NEVER GAME

For once Deaver takes more effort to establish his hero’s bona fides than to give him a compelling and logical plot. The...

Veteran thrillmeister Deaver kicks off a new series about a man who collects rewards for a living.

Don’t call Colter Shaw a private eye, or a freelance investigator, or even a soldier of fortune, though his job includes elements of all three. The son of a cranky survivalist who died years ago amid suspicious circumstances, light-footed Shaw has returned close to his childhood home in the Bay Area in the hope of claiming the $10,000 Frank Mulliner is offering for the return of his daughter, Sophie, a college student who stormed out after the two of them fought over the FOR SALE sign outside his house and hasn’t been seen since. Shaw, who has the cool-headed but irritating habit of calculating the numerical odds on every possibility, thinks there’s a 60 percent chance that Sophie’s dead, “murdered by a serial killer, rapist or a gang wannabe.” Even though he accepts rewards only for rescues, not recoveries, he begins sorting through the scant evidence, quickly gets a hot lead about Sophie’s fate, and just as quickly realizes that Detective Dan Wiley, of the Joint Major Crimes Task Force, should have followed exactly the same clues days ago. (The rapidly shifting relations between Shaw and the law, in fact, are a particular high point here.) The day after Shaw’s search for Sophie comes to a violent end, he’s already, in the time-honored manner of Deaver’s bulldog heroes (The Burial Hour, 2017, etc.), on the trail of a second abduction, that of LGBT activist Henry Thompson. Readers who haven’t skipped the prologue will know that still a third kidnap victim, very pregnant Elizabeth Chabelle, will need to be rescued the following day. Thompson’s grief-stricken partner, Brian Byrd, tells Shaw, “It’s like this guy’s playing some goddamn sick game”—a remark Deaver’s fans will know to give just as much weight as Shaw himself does.

For once Deaver takes more effort to establish his hero’s bona fides than to give him a compelling and logical plot. The results are subpar for this initial installment but more encouraging for the promised series.

Pub Date: May 14, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-525-53594-2

Page Count: 416

Publisher: Putnam

Review Posted Online: March 2, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2019

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FIND HER

A gritty, complicated heroine like Flora Dane deserves a better plot than this needlessly complicated story.

A kidnapping survivor–turned-vigilante tries to save another young woman while the police do everything they can to save them both.

Flora Dane might look unscathed but she’s permanently scarred from having been abducted while on spring break in Florida seven years earlier by Jacob Ness, a sadistic trucker who held her captive for 472 days, keeping her in a coffin for much of the time when he wasn't forcing her to have sex with him. Now back in Boston and schooled in self-defense, Flora is obsessed with kidnapped girls and the nature of survival, a topic she touches on a bit more than necessary in the many flashbacks to her time in captivity. Gardner (Crash & Burn, 2015, etc.) must walk a fine line in accurately evoking the horrors of Flora’s past ordeals without slipping into excessive descriptions of violence; she is not entirely successful. When Flora thwarts another kidnapping attempt by killing Devon Goulding, her would-be abductor, Gardner regular Sgt. Detective D.D. Warren’s interest is piqued even though she’s meant to be on restricted duty. Then Flora disappears for real, and Warren, along with Dr. Samuel Keynes, the FBI victim specialist from Flora's original kidnapping, fears it’s related to the kidnapping three months earlier of Stacey Summers, a case Flora followed closely. Gardner alternates between Warren’s investigation into Flora’s disappearance and Flora’s present-day hell at the hands of a new enemy, but the implausibility of the sheer number of kidnappings, among other things, strains credulity.

A gritty, complicated heroine like Flora Dane deserves a better plot than this needlessly complicated story.

Pub Date: Feb. 9, 2016

ISBN: 978-0-525-95457-6

Page Count: 416

Publisher: Dutton

Review Posted Online: Nov. 18, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2015

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