PROTAGONIST: Jake Landry, junior executive
SETTING: Remote British Columbia
SERIES: Standalone corporate thriller
RATING: 4.25
When you think of a place where you would set a thriller, a corporate environment would probably not be the first setting that would come to mind. After all, what excitement is there in the world of drones laboring in cubicles and stuffed shirts pontificating from their mahogany-paneled offices? Joseph Finder has managed to go beneath that stultifying surface to focus on the power plays that go on behind the scenes, secret groups plotting overthrow, greedy executives going around the law.
Cheryl Tobin has just become the first female CEO of Hammond Aerospace Corporation. Her appointment has come as a surprise to some of the entrenched management, who are busily working to undermine her authority and get her removed from that position. The perfect opportunity presents itself when the top leadership goes on their annual offsite meeting to a remote lodge in British Columbia. Jake Landry, a lower level manager, is summoned to join the group, mostly because of his expertise around one of the company's major products and also to assess why a competitor's plane recently crashed. He has never breathed the rarified air that the executives are used to; as it turns out, in times of crisis, he has more mettle than the entire leadership team put together.
As the group arrives at the lodge, we start to see some of the subversive plans unfolding. There is one group intent on sabotaging Cheryl; various individuals are also working at cross purposes for their own gain. But then the unthinkable happens—a team of armed men take the group hostage. Their leader is very attuned to how the company works and demands a large ransom. From that point on, the various mutinous plots start to unravel, and the unsavory motivations of the various managers are unveiled. Together with his former lover, Ali Hillman who is now Cheryl's assistant, Jake sees what needs to be done and seizes the day, trying to outwit the hostage takers without loss of life. He isn't always successful.
Finder does an exceptional job of going beyond the usual thriller formula and creating a truly suspenseful piece of work. First of all, he developed a very likable protagonist that the reader roots for. Jake is definitely a fish out of water with this group of corporate muckety-mucks. Contrary to the normal behavior of a manager at his level, he doesn't suck up at all. In fact, he tends to do just the opposite, almost pointedly challenging them and not going along with the program. On top of that, he has a decidedly interesting past that equips him well for the business at hand. Will all of the mutinies be exposed? Will the team survive the attack and go back to business as usual? It's easy to assume the answer will be yes, but in Finder's hands, it's not that cut and dried.
Power Play is a book that is almost impossible to put down. The pacing is tremendous and pulls you through the narrative like a fish hooked to a line on a speedboat. True, it wasn't quite credible that Jake would manage to overcome so many tough challenges. And overall, the characters aren't particularly well developed. If you're in the mood for an action-filled adrenaline ride, then Power Play is the book for you. It was for me!