For the last couple of years, David Baldacci has been producing two books a year, and focusing most of his attention on his recent series characters of Amos Decker (Memory Man), Will Robie, Atlee Pine, and Aloysius Archer. Last year he branched out and introduced a new character - Travis Devine – a former Army Ranger who finds himself working for a covert government agency hunting down international criminals.
This year Devine returns in his next adventure - “The Edge” – being sent to investigate a murdered friend of a family that his boss is close friends with. It is a personal mission that takes Devine to the small coastal town of Putnam, Maine, where CIA agent, Jenny Silkwell, was found shot dead and left among the rocks of the ocean beach. Putnam was Silkwell’s hometown where she was born and raised, but her missing government issued laptop and phone are raising serious concerns about national security. Devine’s job is to find who killed her, retrieve the missing information on the PC and phone, or destroy it before it gets into the wrong hands. And do it alone.
When Devine arrives in Putnam, he finds that he is an outsider and not easily accepted. There also seem to be small town secrets all around him. Everyone loved and wants to protect Jenny. She was their hero who escaped town to become an important government agent. Who could have killed her and why? Was it a government enemy that was related to her CIA assignments or was it someone local who had some reason to want her dead? And if it was a town member, what in her past could have triggered such an event?
The local law enforcement doesn’t want him there. Chief of Police, Richard Wayne Harper, and Sargeant Wendy Fuss, who make up most of the police department, are antagonistic to Travis. They disagree with everything he suggests or wants do, refusing to being supportive. Even the medical examiner, Dr. Francoise Guillaume, argues with him and limits information sharing to a minimum. All three go out of their way to let Devine know that he is not wanted, even to the point that Harper threatens to arrest him for tampering with evidence.
Almost everyone that Devine meets is a potential suspect. There’s Jenny’s brother, Dak, who is working hard to invest in the local businesses and revitalize a dying town. There’s Jenny’s younger sister, Alex, who is still suffering from a traumatic assault as a teenager, hiding in the family’s old home and focusing on her skills as an artist. There’s Earl, a recently widowed and retired lobsterman who found Jenny’s body on the beach, but his physical challenges don’t appear to support his story.
As Devine’s search for a killer deepens, long held secrets will be revealed, and someone will do anything it takes from being exposed, including finding a way to take out Travis just like Jenny. Travis is in a race to find the killer before he himself is killed.
There are a several good things about this book and the character of Travis Devine, who feels quite similar to other Baldacci leading characters Will Robie and John Puller. In some ways, they all feel like a blend of each other, but that really isn’t a big deal when you’re reading the books because their all entertaining, even if the lead is interchangeable.
Like most Baldacci thrillers, this was a fast and easy read. Interesting setting, conflicted characters, and extremely fast paced plotting. There were the right amount characters, and every time someone popped up throughout the book, you were able to remember who they were, which helped because again, this was one of his faster moving novels. I especially enjoyed how much the history of the town and the characters interlaced into a strong mystery and several subplots.
I was drawn to several of the characters, especially Alex Silkwell. She was a very intricate individual who had been through a lot of pain, but had an internal strength that shown through every scene she was in. I loved her overall arc, growth, and balance she provided to Devine. Her influence made him a better person.
This one was also a serious potboiler. Each chapter hummed and then ended in a cliffhanger that easily pulled you right into the next chapter. There was no slowing down most of the time in this one. It was just one thing after another that kept Devine’s investigation moving forward at high speed. There were just enough lulls for the reader to ponder the clues and catch your breath. An excellent escapist read that was very hard to put down for sure.
I will say that the plotting was very similar to the books that James Patterson (and his trusty team of co-authors) produce. The fighting and shooting sequences also had some familiar elements to that of Andrew Child’s writing style for choregraphing his “Reacher’ fighting/shootout sequences. I don’t say that to criticize or compliment any of those three authors. The plotting style and fighting/shootout sequences worked well in this book. It just reminded me a lot of Patterson and Child. Just something I thought was interesting to note. Nothing more.
However, the important thing for me was that the prose was definitely Baldacci. His storytelling ability is one of his best writing strengths. He put me in the story right away and established the tension immediately. His characters have depth and real qualities. Their strengths and weaknesses add strength to the story. Baldacci masterfully wraps the plot together over 400 pages so that each step of the mystery is revealed one key moment at a time, and combined with the action sequences to build to a thrilling climax that delivers a winning read. Writing first-class page-turners are not easy. There are few who a truly successful at it, and Baldacci is a master.
Overall, “The Edge” was a worthy follow-up to last year’s “The 6:20 Man” and I even enjoyed the tender thread that Baldacci left at the end that hinted at further conflict for Devine and his mysterious lady on the train, which will hopefully be addressed in another Devine adventure sometime in the near future.
For an author that produced two books this year – “Simply Lies” and “The Edge” – Baldacci hasn’t lost his ability to maintaining a strong writing recipe for success - intricate plotting, character depth, and pacing. Both of those books are excellent examples of why Baldacci is one of my favorite mystery / thriller writers. Like most of his books, I am immediately immersed from the first page all the way to end in each, and once I finish one, I cannot wait to get my hands on the next one.
Until our next reading time together in April, 2024, when “A Calamity of Souls” is published, thank you and best wishes Baldacci!