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), Atlee Pine, Aloysius Archer, and most recently Travis Devine. Now, he is branching out again and introducing a new character – Nash Falls – one that is quite a bit different than these more hardcore heroes suited for the hard jobs and dangerous challenges.
Walter Nash may be his own man, but one that is more sensitive, intelligent, and kind-hearted. One that enjoys an upscale wealthy family life with a wife and daughter. He is not physically strong, nor an experienced secret agent. The business world is his domain, where he is white-collar warrior that holds a high-level leadership position with the Sybaritic Investment firm. His skills are business, mergers, acquisition, and legal documents, his special weapon a tenacity for success.
“Nash Falls” starts off with Walter attending his estranged father’s funeral, an event he is not as welcomed as you would expect. Ever since he chose playing tennis over football in high school, Walter lost his father’s love and their relationship was over from that point on. His father didn’t even let Walter visit him to say goodbye when he was dying. The only reason Walter shows up at the funeral is to close the book out of obligation.
Following the funeral, Nash finds himself with some unexpected and shocking surprises.
The first is being told by his father’s lawyer that they need to talk. Evidently, his father made his son executor of his will as well as leaving him something. That makes no sense whatsoever to Nash since they had been estranged for so long.
The second one is even more concerning, a visit at his home by FBI Special Agent Reed Morris, who seeks a private chat with Walter, who assumes that his father has done something that he will need to resolve. However, the reason has nothing to do with his old man and it has everything to do with Walter and his livelihood. Agent Morris informs him that his company, Sybaritic is secretly laundering money (and lots of it) for an international criminal cartel led by Victoria Steers, a Chinese mastermind that the FBI has been unable to bring down for years. Walter has a choice to make. Either help the FBI by becoming their inside spy and help bring down Steers operations, or pass on their offer and most likely face being prosecuted himself as an officer of the company when it goes down.
As Nash faces making this life changing decision, Steers may have her own inside person, and she has the power and ability to remove Nash from the picture completely in ways he can never see coming. Sometimes ruining an enemy can be much more effective than eliminating them. Before he knows it, Nash will be on the run, and surviving will mean that he he’ll have to change everything about himself, physically, emotionally, and mentally…
In many ways, this is another change-up for Baldacci, and surprisingly a very good one in my opinion. It still maintains the same Baldacci thriller recipe – a strong lead character being thrown into tough situations and having to use his intellectual and a newly developing physical prowess to resolve a set of serious challenges, fight against seriously dangerous bad guys, and in this case, an absolutely brilliant and psychotic woman. His secret recipe is the how he uses the storylines to instill empathy in the character’s outcomes, emotions in their struggles, and strength in their journeys. Even for someone who’s a masterful storyteller like Baldacci, this was one heck of an entertaining reading experience. I was so immersed in it that I finished it in just over 24 hours during my holiday weekend.
And be warned, as Baladacci has done with his other books, this one doesn’t end his story. It leaves off for the next one and includes a sneak preview of it – “Hope Rises” – which publishes in April 2026. I, for one, cannot wait to get my hands on it. It’s been a while since I have been this anxious to read a follow-up book in one of his series. This one is somewhat like his “Atlee Pine” series, one story told over multiple books as opposed to separate or ongoing adventures. But, in my opinion, well worth it so far.
There were a lot of things that I appreciated about this book and Baldacci’s new character, Walter Nash, his family, business associates, and the bad guys.
First, this was an immersive, fast moving, and easy read. One of the key elements for me was the surprisingly complex and flawed characters. Other than the cold-hearted villain, Steers, Baldacci turned several of the cast upside down. You were angry at them one moment and then almost empathetic later on. Several of them go through severe conflicts and challenges that bring on serious reflections and change. For example, Walter’s wife, Judith went from high to low to really low to trying to fight her way back from serious traumatic loss. Another key player – Shock – comes across as downright mean, and then the onion of his life is slowly peeled away. And I haven’t even mentioned Walter yet. I will leave his part out so that I don’t give away any key moments. Baldacci certainly puts everyone through the emotional wringer in this one. That’s for sure.
For me, this turned out to be one of the most immersive, mentally and emotionally, thriller novels of Baldacci that I have read in quite a while. I always enjoy reading his books, and am entertained by them, but this one is now one of my personal favorites. It just connected with me. I liked how not all of the characters were just either good or bad, but that they acted in ways that were both. Baldacci really hit home on themes of family, love, selfishness, forgiveness, change, and of course, revenge, and the cost that comes with it. Yes, this a thriller, but hitting on an emotional level helped amplify the mystery and thriller elements in way that felt refreshing. Yes, there was a definite Count of Monte Cristo vibe, but Baldacci put his own spin on it in a way that worked surprisingly well.
Overall, “Nash Falls” was one of my favorite Baldacci reads. One I enjoyed enough to stay up way too late because I couldn’t find the will to close the book. For an author that’s producing two books per year, he shows that he is still capable of not only maintaining his writing recipe for success - intricate plotting, character depth, and strong pacing – he can raise the bar even higher.
I give this a well-deserved 4.5 out of 5-stars (and yes, Goodreads doesn’t round…).