INVASION OF PRIVCY (Pub. 2015) is the first book I've read by Christopher Reich, and I will definitely check out more of his work. The story kept me turning the pages, with a solid thriller vibe throughout, in spite of the author largely allowing readers to know what was happening all along the way. Not an easy trick to pull off, but Reich manages it well.
This is a quasi-murder mystery wrapped inside a government-meets-big industry conspiracy. I enjoyed it because the author takes readers in sideways, rather than through the eyes of a detective, which is a nice change. It starts out in medias res, with FBI agent Joe Grant, in the midst of a very bad situation that quickly escalates to a no-way-out scenario for him. Grant and his informant end up dead in a fast and horrible ambush that both greatly feared could happen, but didn't see coming.
Joe Grant's wife, Mary, is called to the hospital, where Joe is on life support and surrounded by other federal agents. His supervisor, Don Bennett, gives Mary a cryptic explanation of what transpired to land Joe in ICU. Mary doesn't have time to ponder his words for long because Joe goes into cardiac arrest before they can finish their discussion. Mary can only wish Joe a peaceful passing, and try to hang on to reality for the sake of their two daughters.
But within less than an hour of Joe's passing, Mary is given reason to believe Don has not only withheld information, he's purposely lied to her. Then he tops it off by physically threatening her over possession of Mary's cell phone, which Joe left a final message on, and Mary suspects was not only a cry for help, but his own cryptic way of giving her a clue to the situation that has unraveled under Joe's watch -- a situation which threatens national and international security.
Mary can't bring Joe back to life, but she at least wants a clearer understanding of why her husband died, and she sets out to get the answers. That puts her and her family in jeopardy, right after she makes the first follow-up call, but she's willing to risk it. When Joe's supervisor threatens to besmirch her husband's name, and repeal his posthumous pension, Mary commits to throwing everything she's got at bringing the bad guys to light, and restoring her husband's good name, not to mention the pension she and her girls desperately need and deserve.
Mary quickly reveals herself to be an unexpectedly formidable foe for the people wrecking havoc behind the scenes. They think she's just a housewife and mother, but she has skills given by her long-deceased Navy admiral father, as well as what Joe taught her along the way, combined with sheer determination and motivation to persevere. Plus she's got a teenaged daughter that is every bit as tech savvy as the people she's up against, although Mary doesn't know it yet.
Quite a few plates are spinning by the time the story reaches the one-third mark, and they just keep spinning faster, with even more put into play before it's all said and done. And even though readers are 95% aware of who the bad guys are, and largely why / what they are after, Reich manages to keep us in great suspense right up until the last page. The story draws to a satisfying conclusion, with all questions answered, and a solid serving of comeuppance meted out to the bad guys.