The search for truth is no match for the power of temptation.
They call him the Answer Man. As a lie detector operator, he's an expert in the science of truth and the art of lies -- and both are coming in handy.
Because Ken Parker is in a bad way. His business isn't making enough to support him and his sick brother. The repo men are after his MG, and an eviction notice has been nailed to his door.
Then Myth Daniels, a slick and beautiful lawyer, offers him a deal: Teach her client how to beat the polygraph machine and he'll get $50,000 in cash. But Ken -- more than anyone -- should know the price of dishonesty. As he's drawn deeper into an explosive game of greed and violence, the question will be how to stay alive.
Roy Johansen is a New York Times-bestselling mystery/suspense author and screenwriter.
He was awarded the Edgar Allen Poe award from the Mystery Writers of America in the Best Television Miniseries or Movie category for his original screenplay "Murder 101". He continues to write screenplays for Warner Bros., Universal Pictures, Disney, and MGM.
He has written several mystery/suspense novels on his own, but Roy Johansen also collaborates with his mother, Iris Johansen, on several best-selling mystery novels, including Storm Cycle, The Hannah Bryson series, and The Kendra Michaels series.
This was my first Roy Johansen, and, while it kept me engaged -- I wanted thriller mind candy and I got thriller mind candy -- it was so by the numbers that I couldn't rate it higher. Ken Parker is a barely making it polygraph examiner who is offered a lot of money (and of course he has a war disabled brother who needs the cash) to teach an accused embezzler how to beat the polygraph. He gives in, and that's when the plot starts rolling and the bodies start piling up.
So, demerit no. 1: The attorney who hires him, Myth Daniels, is incredibly beautiful, and with almost no explanation, falls for Ken (obligatory shallow romance, check). Demerit no. 2: The ultimate suspect, and I'm not giving it away, is about as unlikely as you could imagine (head scratcher solution, check), and finally, demerit no. 3: As in too many of these novels, the dialogue is both adolescently cloying and too good to be true (18-34 year old male version of witty repartee, check).
No urge to return to this author, best seller or not.