Complex, alluring thriller
Killer Move
By Michael Marshall
(William Morrow)
Author Michael Marshall takes a common man and throws him a curveball in this paranoid thriller, “Killer Move.”
Bill Moore craves something more than his job selling condos near the Florida Keys. Although happily married, his ambition to start his own business begins to make him a bit selfish and greedy. One morning he arrives for another dreary business day and finds a card on his desk that says MODIFIED.
His life as he knows it has just ended with one word.
Life for Moore starts to drastically change. At first the clues are more annoying than dangerous, like emails from his work computer that Moore never sent, books delivered to his home that he never ordered, and provocative photos he has never seen showing up on his hard drive.
Someone has cracked his passwords and started messing with his familiar world. When his wife begins to doubt his innocence, Moore realizes he has to find the hacker — and fast. When a colleague disappears, the evidence points to Moore as the murderer. He realizes that it’s really not a game.
Marshall creates a noir feel to the narrative as he amps up the paranoia factor. It’s too bad that he decided to make the protagonist so unlikable that his misfortunes don‘t quite hit the emotional level they should.
In addition, the ending is a bit muddied and not the slam-dunk a book like this deserves. And, although a minor quibble, “Modified” would have been a much better title.
With all of this in mind, “Killer Move” is still a compelling read that raises as many questions as answers.
(AP)
Strange piece of U.S. history
The Devil Colony: a Sigma Force Novel
By James Rollins
(William Morrow)
James Rollins delivers one of the best thrillers of the year in “The Devil Colony,” an amazing amalgam of history, science and adventure.
The Sigma Force has its hands full when a cave in the Rocky Mountains full of mummified bodies reveals a possible explanation for a strange piece of American history.
A protest at the site becomes explosive when a radical sets off a bomb. The resulting explosion unleashes a powerful substance long buried beneath the Earth and the disaster countdown begins.
Painter Crowe, the director of Sigma Force, is shocked to learn that his niece set off the bomb. She calls him, pleading for his help in proving her innocence. He takes off to rescue her and find out the truth.
The rest of the team tries to deal with the aftermath of the explosion and uncovers evidence of a secret that traces back to the Founding Fathers and the first expedition into the new frontier of the West. Meanwhile, a notorious man named Rafael St. Germaine will do everything in his power to make sure the Sigma Force fails.
Rollins combines science and history with the best qualities of a great page-turner and creates a single-sitting read that wows on every page. He has the gift of creating cinematic ideas with 3-D characters, making the overall experience intense and insightful.
(AP)