REVIEW OF AUDIOBOOK; DECEMBER 9, 2016
Narrator: George Guidall
This was a bit of a convoluted mess at times yet I came very close to giving it 5 stars (!!!). I didn't, in the end, because it went on too long, had too many characters, and was hard to follow even though the main premise was simple. I enjoy corporate espionage and intrigue but not when the developments are too complex to keep up with. In this case, as I said, the main plot is simple - Jason Archer is supposedly selling his company's confidential info (pertaining to their proposed buyout of another firm) to a rival. That's it in a nutshell, but Baldacci adds in murder, mercenaries, closeted businessmen and the Federal Reserve. To really keep one's interest, you'd have to (pun intended) know a little about interest rates and the central banking system. Just a teeny bit to appreciate the second mystery thread. So yes, Jason Archer's corporate treachery is just one thread. The two are connected but it took me a LONG time to unravel and fit things together.
This was one book where the reader is as clueless as the FBI since, very often, we can already guess who the bad guy is and the motive for the bad deed, be it murder or selling secrets. Apart from this rather major negative (the convoluted telling) it's a solid FBI investigation and the star of the show isn't Jason Archer but Lee Sawyer, the tortured FBI special agent, tormented not just by his broken family life but by his attraction to Archer's wife, Sidney (Sawyer's attraction is kept well in control and does not intrude in the story, in case you're wondering).
A little reminder: this book was published in 1997 so one has to bear with the explanations about email backups and pixels, etc, stuff back then we were just starting to get to know.
Ohh, Sidney. She's not just a smart lawyer but Rambo-in-heels. Who would've guessed? Normally, I would have found her type easy to dislike but not here. I did like Sidney, her unflagging devotion to her husband and her kickassiness.
I found Total Control unputdownable and carried my cellphone and bluetooth earphones with me even to the toilet throughout the two days and nights it took me to finish this 18-hour-plus audiobook. I did get rather irritated about having to use my Back Button several times simply because I couldn't follow the revelation, or some significant comment. I have not had to do that this many times for other audiobooks, ever. Any other book, I would have, undoubtedly, aborted. That I stuck firmly to Total Control is impressive to me. Still, much as I enjoyed this one, I'm going to have to listen to something much more straightforward to give my brain a rest.
PS: the romance-lover in me can't help but imagine Lee Sawyer and Sidney Archer getting together one day, when she's ready. For now I am satisfied Sawyer was a little less tortured at the close of the story.