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Book Review: Coercion by Tim Tigner

September 11, 2015 at 8:32 am by Claudia

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Today  I am reviewing Coercion  by Tim Tigner for TLC Book Tours. As always, I am provided with a copy of the book in return for my honest review.

About the book (from the publisher): The phone rings and an offer is made, leaving you only seconds to decide. Betray your country, or watch your family drop dead before your eyes.

After the Iron Curtain’s collapse, Russia appears to be finished as a superpower. But KGB General Vasily Karpov is secretly working to restore Russia’s status by forcing Americans into traitorous acts of espionage and sabotage with the aid of a new secret weapon. Meanwhile, his biggest target is within Russia, where Karpov is plotting to capture the Kremlin for himself.

Former US soldier and spy Alex Ferris becomes the first to fathom Karpov’s grand plans. Racing from San Francisco to Siberia, Alex must elude ambushes, assassins, and death from exposure as he wages a one-man war against a growing global threat and the resurgence of the Soviets.

My review: The secret weapon here is an injectable substance that can stay dormant until activated, whereupon it causes the injectee’s death. Using that fact as bait, Karpov is able to manipulate his targets and make them betray all sorts of secrets; secrets that they would never reveal otherwise. And I have to add that, despite what the publisher’s blurb says, Karpov used it on Russians, as well.

It seems beyond the realm of believability, but we all know that in this day and age nothing is truly impossible and that there are people out there developing biological weapons as I write this.

The premise is a very compelling one and Tigner clearly knows a whole lot about Russia and the end of the cold war – Gorbachev is in power during these events. Tigner lived there and his vast knowledge about Russia during this time period lends a historical accuracy to the pages of this thriller.

There are some plot points that strained my credulity. I’ll not reveal them here because I don’t like to give away too many details. The hero is one of those superheroes – he reminds me of Ludlum’s Jason Bourne or the onscreen character Tom Cruise plays in the Mission Impossible series – that can seemingly do it all. On the printed page, that doesn’t always hold up to any sort of real scrutiny, but one just has to go with it.

It’s a complicated plot, with many characters, and Tigner manages to juggle all of it and keep the story moving forward. I also like the fact that he doesn’t resort to the kind of writing that makes all Russians bad guys. Tigner clearly has a great deal of respect for the people of Russia.

It’s an interesting and, often, riveting read.

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About the author: Tim began his career in Soviet Counterintelligence with the U.S. Army Special Forces, the Green Berets. With the fall of the Berlin Wall, Tim switched from espionage to arbitrage. Armed with a Wharton MA rather than a Colt M16, he moved to Moscow in the midst of Perestroika. There he led prominent multinational medical companies, worked with cosmonauts on the Mir Space Station (from Earth, alas), chaired the Association of International Pharmaceutical Manufacturers, and helped write Russia’s first law on healthcare.

Moving to Brussels during the formation of the EU, Tim ran Europe, the Middle East, and Africa for a Johnson & Johnson company and traveled like a character in a Robert Ludlum book. He eventually landed in Silicon Valley, where like minds with wild ideas come to congregate around the creation of (nightmares and) dreams. Now he launches new medical technologies as a startup CEO, and devises devious devices for fictional characters who aim to change the world.

Tim grew up in the Midwest and Europe, earning a BA from Hanover College and then a MBA in Finance and a MA in International Studies from the University of Pennsylvania. He now lives with wife Elena and their two daughters in Northern California.

One of you will be the winner of a copy of Coercion. Just leave a comment on this post and I’ll pick a winner on Sunday evening.

Happy Friday.

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Tagged With: book review, CoercionFiled Under: TLC Book Review 14 Comments

Book Review: Threshold by G. M. Ford

April 13, 2015 at 8:55 am by Claudia

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Hello everyone. Today I am reviewing Threshold by G.M. Ford for TLC Book Tours. As always, I am provided with a copy of the book in exchange for my honest review.

About the book (from the publisher): Acclaimed for his best-selling books featuring P.I. Leo Waterman, Ford introduces readers to a new, yet equally unorthodox hero in Threshold ; embattled Detective Sergeant Mickey Dolan. Still smarting from the very public breakup of his marriage and facing conduct complaints for the use of excessive force, Dolan is at the end of his rope – and possibly at the end of his career – when he catches a case that just might turn things around: the disappearance of the wife and daughters of a powerful city councilman.

While investigating, Dolan meets Eve Pressman and her remarkable daughter, Grace. Gifted with the ability to bring people out of comas, Grace is reluctant to be thrust into the public eye but determined to help those in need. Eve and Grace may know where Councilman Royster’s family is and the terrible truth that sent the three of them into hiding in the first place. Now Dolan faces the toughest choice of his career: Is he still a good cop if he has to do the wrong thing?

My review: G.M. Ford is the author of a series of books featuring Leo Waterman, as well as a series featuring Frank Corso. I went into this particular book not having read any of Ford’s previous books and I plan to remedy that very soon. Threshold  is excellent; a skillfully paced story that will keep you engaged to the very end.

Ford has a gift for characterization; everyone, from Mickey Dolan on down to the most minor of characters, is richly detailed. He also has a gift for writing place/setting. I could see the streets of this unnamed city; I could visualize the buildings, the alleyways, the dangerous parts of town. His words create a vivid and fully realized world.

The story itself is extremely compelling: a cop needing a case to sink his teeth into, along with more than a little redemption, a young woman who is ‘different’ and endowed with gifts most people aren’t willing to accept or acknowledge, the battle between those with power and money and connections and those who are caught in the crosshairs. And in the end, Dolan must face his demons and make a difficult choice – one which will propel the plot to its conclusion.

Ford knows how to tell a story. He knows how to grab the reader. And you will be grabbed. I promise.

I really liked this book. I know this phrase is overused, but I truly ‘couldn’t put it down.’ As soon as I reached the final page, I found myself thinking how wonderful it was that Ford has written so many other books….I’m thinking the Leo Waterman series will be my next choice for reading matter.

I loved Mickey Dolan and I hope this stand-alone novel is the start of another series for Ford.

About the author: G.M. Ford broke onto the mystery scene with Who in Hell is Wanda Fuca?, a gin-soaked tome featuring Seattle private investigator Leo Waterman. The six-book Leo Waterman series was nominated for several awards, including the Shamus, the Anthony, and the Lefty. In 2001, Ford launched a new series featuring disgraced reporter Frank Corso and his goth assistant, Meg Dougherty. In 2011, after a twelve-year hiatus, he decided to write a new Leo Waterman novel, Thicker Than Water, which Thomas & Mercer promptly bought. His eighth Leo Waterman book, Chump Change, followed in 2014. Ford lives and works in Seattle, and is married to the beautiful and talented mystery author, Skye Kathleen Moody.

Good news! One of you will win a copy of Threshold. Just leave a comment on this post before Thursday evening.

There’s a new post up on Just Let Me Finish This Page.

Happy Monday.

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Tagged With: book review, G.M. Ford, ThresholdFiled Under: TLC Book Review 34 Comments

Book Review: Baltimore Blues by Laura Lippman

February 3, 2015 at 9:29 am by Claudia

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Today, I am reviewing Baltimore Blues by Laura Lippman for TLC Book Tours. As always, I am provided with a copy of the book in exchange for my honest review.

About the book (from the publisher): When a former Baltimore reporter must solve the murder of a notorious attorney, she discovers Charm City is rife with dark, sordid, and dangerous secrets.

In a city where someone is murdered almost every day, attorney Michael Abramowitz’s death should be just another statistic. But the slain lawyer’s notoriety makes the case front page news in every local paper except the Star, which crashed and burned before Abramowitz did.

A former Star reporter who knows every inch of this town – from historic Fort McHenry to the crumbling projects of Cherry Hill – now-unemployed journalist Tess Monaghan also knows the guy the cops like for the killing: cuckholded fiancé Darryl “Rock” Paxton. The time is ripe for a career move, so when rowing buddy Rock wants to hire her to do some unorthodox snooping to help clear his name, Tess agrees.

But there are lethal secrets hiding in the Charm City shadows. And Tess’s own name could end up on that ever-expanding list of Baltimore dead.

My review: The publishers are rereleasing this first book in the popular Tess Monaghan series in preparation for the release of the latest book in the series, Hush Hush, which will be published later this month. I’ve reviewed one other Lippman book, After I’m Gone (a stand alone novel), and liked it very much, so I was quite happy to read this first Tess Monaghan book.

After I’m Gone introduced me to Lippman, who I had most definitely been aware of but had not yet had the pleasure of reading. As I look back at that review, I see that I wrote: “I look forward to starting the Tess Monaghan series.” Someone must have heard me, because here I am with the opportunity to review the first book in the series.

Tess, a former reporter at loose ends, trying to put together an income by working in her aunt’s bookstore as well as doing work for another relative, finds a rhythm to her days of unemployment by rising early, grabbing a scull and rowing. She often encounters her friend Rock during these early morning rows. The publisher’s blurb is a wee bit misleading, as Tess’s friend Rock initially hires her to follow his girlfriend because he’s worried about her frequent absences. He figures Tess has time on her hands and has a reporter’s instinct to follow clues, so she might be able to figure out what is going on. When things go wrong and the girlfriend’s co-worker is found murdered with Rock arrested as a suspect, Rock’s lawyer hires Tess as part of his investigative team.

From there? I won’t give away any of the plot. Lippman writes wonderfully rich characters, and this novel is full of them. As a lifetime resident of Baltimore, Tess is surrounded by friends and family who figure prominently in Tess’s daily life. She also knows the city like the back of her hand. In this book, as in After I’m Gone, the city of Baltimore is a character in itself. Lippman clearly knows and loves that city, and it shows on every page. It is vividly and lovingly portrayed.

Boy, does Lippman know how to write a mystery! She is skilled in plotting and maintaining a level of tension that builds until the final pages. She knits together all the various threads of the storyline in a way that makes absolute sense, but still results in surprises. And don’t we all want to be surprised when we’re reading a mystery? Baltimore Blues is seamless and gripping. As I found with After I’m Gone, you can’t put it down.

Tess is a wonderful character; strong, funny, insecure, self-depricating, dogged and inventive in her pursuit of answers. I believe there are eleven novels in this series so far. Hush Hush  (which I will also be reviewing) will be the twelfth. I can’t wait to read the rest of them – in order. In Tess Monaghan and her family and friends, Lippman has given us a bevy of wonderful characters that we want to meet up with again. And again.

Laura Lippman

About the author: Since her debut in 1997, Laura Lippman has been heralded for her thoughtful, timely crime novels set in her beloved hometown of Baltimore. She is the author of twenty works of fiction, including eleven Tess Monaghan mysteries. She lives in Baltimore, New Orleans, and New York City with her family.

Good news! One of you will be the lucky winner of a copy of Baltimore Blues. If you’re interested, leave a comment on this post and I will pick a winner on Friday evening. Good luck! (US Residents only.)

By the way, the winner of a copy of Cain and Abe  by James Grippando is Linda of A la Carte. Congratulations!

Just added: News on Just Let Me Finish This Page!

Happy Tuesday.

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Tagged With: book reviewFiled Under: TLC Book Review 37 Comments

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I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

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