The heart-stopping new thriller featuring FBI Special Agent Frank Patrese, on the trail of a crazed serial killer targeting Ivy League colleges.
ONE GAMETwo weeks before Kwasi King, chess’s answer to Muhammad Ali, is due to defend his world title, his mother is found brutally murdered yards from Yale University. A tarot card has been left next to her dismembered body.
TWO PLAYERSSoon, more bodies turn up at other Ivy League colleges, all with tarot cards. But while some have been killed in a frenzy, others were dispatched with clinical precision. It looks like FBI Special Agent Franco Patrese’s looking for not just one killer, but two.
CHECK MATEAnd while Patrese hunts, he knows that he too is being hunted, for he’s received his own tarot card. The Fool. Could he be the next victim of this macabre intellectual battle?
An interesting idea but not well executed. The plot relies on way too many coincidences and leaps of logic by the investigators. The pace is generally slow with all characters introduced by large chunks of introduction and entire chapters of background in which nothing at all actually happens. And all of the major twists are very predictable.
Chess is central to this serial killer-type novel, a page-turner if with too much telling rather than showing and much grosser than expected. Franco Patrese is an FBI agent investigating decapitation murders around Ivy League New York and Connecticut, one victim the mother of an unstable Fischer-type black chess world champion. Many characters have the names of famous players and an AI chess computer is critical as a cat-and-mouse battle, more decapitations and red-herrings climax in a gruesome chess game.
I was unable to put this down. From the first pages the pace is fast, and the body count mounts. Agent Patrese is called in to solve the crimes. One killer or two? There are some distinct similarities between some of the killings, but others seem quite different, although clearly linked in some way. The theories are tested, refined, and often thrown out. I have not read anything by Daniel Blake before, but I shall definitely look out for his books in the future. An excellent read.
This book could have benefited from having about 200 pages cut out. It was interminably long and gave way too much detail about chess. Fair enough, do your research and give some correct info, but this was over the top. The day to day of the case also was way too long. In the end I just about prayed for the book to finish as it was becoming tedious to listen any longer.
Some of the characters did not to stay true to themselves either.
I found this book while on holiday and didn't get to finish it so I downloaded it as soon as I got back home. I couldn't stop reading, from the very first page I was hooked. The only thing I didn't like was the ending,all that build up for a very abrupt ending but other than a fantastic read
Ouch! Another book not finished. The opening was gross. The mystery had enough focus, but there was too much going on related to tarot and mystique. Not for me, this one either.
Should have had a better end for such a glorious story. Little childish and Patrese acted like a fool most of the time. Still fluent but one of the mediocre books.