I stumbled across the book at a local Barnes and Nobles last year. Thought I’d give it a try, after reading the overview on the back cover. I was instantly drawn into the pages of this political thriller, which was expertly written by a man who is well versed in his craft. The author definitely did a lot of research before writing this story. And all of the praise presented on the early pages prior to the story’s introduction was well deserved. This is not an action story, it is more of an intellectual journey into the web of deception that takes place in Washington DC, involving crooked politicians and duplicitous Federal agents. And as the drama unfolds you get to see just how low certain government officials will be willing to go, in order to protect their own interests. The Life of the innocent seems to be a trivial thing, as men in powerful positions begin to move various lethal chess pieces in order to ensure that their powerful agencies get to be protected. And there is a lot of bloodshed that ensues as the diabolical individuals in the CIA strive to ensure that their secrets remain buried within the souls of dead witnesses. And the villainous government officials quickly prove that they are willing to kill even their own, in order to remain immune to future legal prosecution for their questionable acts.
The story features a young lady named Faith Lockhart, and her mentor/father-figure Danny Buchanan – who happens to be a lobbyists that is bribing members of congress. Faith and Danny have been involved in a complex bribery scheme that has some very powerful officials roped into their net of deceit – so they both know secrets about a lot of crooked people in the legislative branch of government. And with time, Danny gets cornered by a very devious man who works for the CIA. And there is another protagonist called Lee Adams – he is a PI, who is hired by Danny to spy on Faith. And Faith has recently gone to the FBI, in order to see if she and Danny can confess their sins and gain joint immunity.
And on a “faithful” night, Ms. Faith and an FBI agent head to a safehouse in the country side of Virginia, where an assassin is waiting in the woods. And Lee Adams also happens to be tracking Faith on that evening. Lee arrives at the scene before everyone else, without knowing that a battle was scheduled to occur at the safehouse – which he breaks into, in order to do his Private Investigator thing. A shootout occurs and blood is shed at the isolated venue. And after a series of twisting events, Faith and Lee become joint fugitives, and the FBI are drawn into the mess, in order to find out who killed their agent that was shadowing Faith on the faithful night.
In this story, several Feds and civilians die along the way, as the author gives a gripping tale that will keep you on the edge of your seat, while making sure that the audience is resiliently drawn along from chapter to chapter.
The entire book is well written, but I’ll point out that this is an old tale, written back in 1999; so its about 13 years old. Nothing wrong with that, its just that the technology described in the pages is a little dated, as are the methods of gathering Signal Intelligence that the writer describes. But that doesn’t stop the mysterious ride from being fast paced, without being overly laborious. I will point out that there are a lot of drawn-out conversations in this one, which are designed to explains “the what and why” of the ongoing investigations.
And per the writing style of the author, I actually found myself laughing-out-loud as he described several segments of the story, giving comedic glimpses into the minds of the characters that gave them real depth. I felt a bit let down as the author built up the romantic tension between Faith and Lee, up to about half of the book. And then, when they finally got together and did it, the scene was described in just one sentence.... Honestly, there was far too much sexual attraction between them for just ONE SENTENCE and then a sole paragraph was added to close out that part of their “bedroom interaction”. Trust me, you will feel emotionally drawn into the plight of the characters, which is a sign of good writing.
And at the very end, well, it just didn’t end well. Honestly, you may feel a bit let down - and even rather disappointed - by the final chapters, feeling as if the author could have rewritten some sections of the 3rd Act of the storyline, without subtracting from the authenticity of the story. Sometimes I wonder if authors are struggling to reach a large quota of pages, thus they stretch their story in order to make sure that their publisher has a 450-page or 500-page book for printing. As an author myself, I know that not every book has to be a lengthy one. I know of an author who writes 700-page science fiction books, and after talking to fans that actually read his stuff, I laughed to discover that the readers actually skip pages and even Chapters, when the long 700-page story gets too boring. That alone implies that the writer of the lengthy book ought to have literally trimmed out the fat, in order to stick to the central plot... which may clearly yield a shorter book, perhaps 355 pages. And there is nothing wrong with that, as long as it is written with a respectable plot.
All right, I still give this book 4 Stars. It was well written, but the ending could have been executed in a better manner.
David Baldacci is now one of the authors that I’ll have to keep an eye on for his future releases. It turns out that he’s written about 23 books and this is the first one that I’ve read – his first book was published back in 1996, so he’s been doing this for a while. In a few months I’ll probably take a look at his latest release in 2011, titled “The Sixth Man,” and see what the conflicted buzz is all about [according to Amazon.com reviews, some readers love it, but die-hard fans of David’s work seem to hate it]... but first, I’ve got some other unread books that are waiting for my attention...