by Ted Allbeury ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 1, 2001
Literate, intricately plotted, full of believable and appealing characters: Rules of the Game shows the impressive and...
Superbly crafted thriller set during the Cold War, about which it is now possible to feel nostalgic.
Ursula Jaeger is remarkable not just for her beauty, intelligence, and gentleness. She also has second sight: show her a picture of Ronald Reagan, for instance, let her study it, and she can tell you much of what occupies his mind. This ability quite naturally has big-time spying organizations salivating. At the moment, the KGB has her, the CIA wants her, and England's SIS thinks it knows how to steal her. David Fisher, a top-flight agent stationed in Germany, draws the assignment to kidnap Ursula as she visits her father in East Berlin. Being the clever, resourceful professional that he is, Fisher carries it off without a hitch. But naïve, duped Ursula is anything but a professional. She's terrified, and it unavoidably becomes part of Fisher's job to reassure and calm her sufficiently so that she can be as productive for the West as she was for her former masters. He brings that off too, but in the process an unexpected thing happens to icy, self-sufficient Fisher. For the first time in his life, he falls in love. Meanwhile, the Americans have soured on “Operation Aeolus.” They want the mission aborted and the package (read: Ursula) returned. Fisher, of course, understands that to do so is tantamount to consigning his beloved to Lubyanka and the far-from-tender mercies of a vengeful KGB. Carefully, guilefully, he plans an escape for them both, but as all veteran readers know full well, the cold is a hard place to come in from.
Literate, intricately plotted, full of believable and appealing characters: Rules of the Game shows the impressive and still-underrated Allbeury (Show Me a Hero, 1994, etc.) at the top of his game.Pub Date: Jan. 1, 2001
ISBN: 0-7278-5736-3
Page Count: 256
Publisher: Severn House
Review Posted Online: June 24, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 2001
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by Mary Kubica ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 29, 2014
The proliferation of older characters like Eve will be a pleasant and unexpected find for the many readers who understand...
Kubica’s psychological thriller centers on the abduction of a young teacher.
Mia Dennett comes from massive wealth, and that made her a juicy target. Chicago Police Detective Gabe Hoffman is assigned to lead the official search and finds himself increasingly attracted to Mia’s mother, a beautiful British woman in her early 60s. The story alternates between the past and present and is told through the voices of three of the participants: Mia’s mother, Eve; her abductor, Colin; and Gabe, the detective. Mia, who was freed after months of living in the Minnesota woods with her captor, has a type of amnesia that, her psychiatrist says, allows her to block out parts of what happened to her. Gabe is still trying to track down the truth about her captivity, while Eve is working to regain the daughter she believes is underneath Mia’s apparent apathy and confusion. Meanwhile, readers follow along with the abduction itself in Colin’s words and discover an odd but burgeoning bond developing between captor and captive in the harsh and unforgiving climate. Although Kubica has chosen to recount her tale in the present tense, which adds an odd stiffness to her otherwise very readable prose, she makes the characters engaging and moves the story along at a good clip. If the novel lacks credibility in any one area, it’s that the Chicago PD, one of the busiest law enforcement agencies in the world, would have the luxury of assigning one detective to a single case for months on end, even if the abductee was the daughter of an influential member of the judiciary.
The proliferation of older characters like Eve will be a pleasant and unexpected find for the many readers who understand that life over 55 can still be interesting.Pub Date: July 29, 2014
ISBN: 978-0-7783-1655-8
Page Count: 400
Publisher: Harlequin MIRA
Review Posted Online: June 4, 2014
Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2014
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by Nora Roberts ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 17, 1992
Suspenseful, glamorous story of love, blackmail, and magic, set in New Orleans and Washington, D.C., about a family of high-class magicians practicing the time-honored profession of thievery. When magician Maxmillian Nouvelle adopts the 12-year-old runaway Luke Callahan, he gives him more than a family: He teaches him the secrets of blending what's real and what's not...giving people what they want—and also taking what they value. For the Great Nouvelle is a master jewel-thief; stealing from the undeserving rich warms his blood like the anticipation of good sex, a passion that both Luke and Max's bratty daughter Raxanne eventually share. Thirteen years pass: As Luke practices the fine arts of larceny and escapology, Roxanne grows into a flame-haired witch who turns bell, book, and candle into smoke onstage. Offstage, she trades in her David Cassidy poster for Luke; together, they set off sparks that could make an innocent bystander..go up in flames. But Luke's invincibility, like the Great Houdini's, is deceptive: Slimy Sam Wyatt—a former grifter now running for the Senate—slithers in from Luke's past, his frigid heart full of contempt for the family he once tried to seam. He threatens to frame Luke for murder and expose the Nouvelles' after-hours show unless he disappears. Five years later, a homesick Luke reappears, determined to show the disillusioned Roxanne that he's more than smoke and mirrors. Together, they set out to plot vengeance, staking everything on their most daring sting to date. True to the magician's oath, Roberts reveals no secrets, but the illusion works—in a compelling and detail-rich first hardcover. Good escape reading.
Pub Date: July 17, 1992
ISBN: 0-399-13761-0
Page Count: 384
Publisher: Putnam
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 1992
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