Steve Berry is the bestselling author of the Cotton Malone thriller/suspense series (similar to Dan Brown’s Robert Langdon series).
Every four to five years, or so, Berry likes to publish a standalone novel. In 2025, he has published a non-series book – “The List” – for our summer reading pleasure.
Berry actually wrote “The List” back in the early 1990’s but never published it. It was his second novel, based on his own personal experiences as lawyer in small-town Georgia representing both sides of business, working for a big company, as well as representing the union employees. As he stated in interviews, Berry reread it during the COVID pandemic and thought he still had a good story to share, so he rewrote it, strengthening the narrative, bringing it up to current time period, and shortening it by about 15,000 words.
“The List” begins with a murder. The planned killing of a retired “old man” who like clockwork goes fishing out on Eagle Lake in central Georgia and made to look like an accident.
Two years later Brent Walker is returning to his hometown of nearby Concord, Georgia. He’s been gone ten years, working in the District Attorney’s office in Atlanta, working through a self-imposed exile following the failure of his marriage. His father died two years ago, and two driving forces are calling him home. The first is his being hired by the same company his father worked for - Southern Republic Pulp and Paper Company - as its new assistant general counsel. The second, and more personal reason, is that his mother has been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s and he needs to be there for her.
However, on the very day he arrives, Walker receives a mysterious visitor who warns him to watch himself, to be careful about his job, it’s not what he thinks it is. Before he can get any more information out of her other than a reference to Proverbs 22:3, she’s gone, leaving him confused. Her comments don’t make any sense. Southern Republic has been heavily invested for decades in Concord, a major contributor to the local community. It’s Concord’s biggest employer, driving the local economy and providing jobs, medical benefits, and pensions that provide for a good retirement.
What Bent doesn’t know about it is the list. A list of numbers that would reveal the dangerous truth behind Southern Republic’s true success. About 20 years or more ago, the three owners of the company stumbled into a very unconventional and extremely illegal approach to dealing with a union leader’s unwillingness to negotiate in good faith. One that turned out to benefit them, the company, and the rest of the employees. It worked so well in controlling costs that the three owners extended that strategy to control costs over the long-term, and it’s worked quite well for them.
That is until now, when one of the owners is having second thoughts about their strategy and its impact on the lives of their worker’s and retiree’s families. He even orchestrated the hiring of Walker as part of a secret plan that he is almost ready to put into motion. A plan that will place not only Walker’s life at risk, but also make his mother, friends, and the woman he has secretly loved all his life, the target for professional killers that will do anything to protect the owner’s secrets…
The result is a pleasurable, intense, and suspenseful summer reading experience. Dare I say, even better than I expected.
There are a several good things to like about this one-off from Steve Berry’s usual Cotton Malone historical thrillers. For me, this was a prime example of sometimes more is less, at least from a scope perspective. This was a fine-tuned, complex mystery delivered in smooth rhythmic, tension filled suspense. Easily immersive and compelling, and I really appreciated that Berry didn’t overdo the story. He stayed focus on the characters and their key plotlines, making them hum like a lead guitarist in a famous rock band. This book delivered an excellent summer reading experience that almost felt under-rated.
Those who regularly read Steve Berry will recognize the usual elements involved. And I will admit, although the formula remains unchanged for the most part, Berry did a good job of setting up this adventure and laying out the foundation of the story. The beginning flowed well and doesn’t feel rushed or forced. Characters were introduced in a multi-layered manner, flashing between the current moment and their background story that brought them to this point, smoothly connecting the past to the present. He nailed the small-town setting, executed a gripping mystery with multi-dimensional characters and conflict, and delivered a climax that packed an emotional punch and left me fully satisfied.
Overall, “The List” was a fun read that surprisingly turned out to be one of my favorite Steve Berry novels. Berry delivered a perfect summer page-turner that kept me up late at night, fully entertained and satisfied. For all those who focus on his Cotton Malone adventures, don’t leave this one out. It’s well worth the read.