First Read: This book was written by James Patterson co-authored with Brendan Dubois, and read by Karissa Vacker. TWENTY-ONE MINUTES before the ambush, Harrison Tucker—former state senator, former Ohio governor, President of the United States, leader of the free world, and a month away from being reelected in a landslide to a second term—is lying on his stomach on a king-size bed in an Atlanta hotel room, feet toward the headboard, chin resting on a pillow, watching a retrospective documentary on the TV series House of Cards with the love of his life.
A breakfast cart with the remains of two meals has been pushed to one side of the small but adequate room, and he sighs with pleasure as his companion, Tammy Doyle, straddling his back, gives him a thorough and deep back rub.
“Look,” he says, watching the fictional president slither his way across the screen, “writers have to fictionalize politics and deal-making, like on The West Wing or Madam Secretary, but there’s no way Frank Underwood could be elected president in real life. You know why?”
Tammy lowers her head, purrs in his ear. Prior to this they were both clothed, while he was giving a fund-raising speech and she was watching from a distant table that had cost her lobbying firm ten thousand dollars, but now they were both nude, the room filled with the scent of perspiration, coffee, and sex.
In James Patterson's new stand-alone thriller, one secret can bring down a government when the President's affair to remember becomes a nightmare he wishes he could forget.
Sally Grissom is a top secret service agent in charge of the Presidential Protection team. She knows that something is amiss when she is summoned to a private meeting with the President and his Chief of Staff without any witnesses. But she couldn't have predicted that she'd be forced to take on an investigation surrounding the mysterious disappearance of the First Lady--with strict orders
to keep it a secret.
Second Read: The First Lady's absence comes in the wake of the scandalous, public revelation of the president's affair, so at first it seems as though she is simply cutting off all contact as she recuperates at a horse farm in Virginia. What begins as an innocent respite quickly reveals itself as a twisted case when the White House receives a ransom note along with the First Lady's finger. The First Couple had been separated for quite awhile. When the President went off the protected area, the first lady came and shot him in the neck until he died. Unusual book. Kind of strange reading, but I mostly enjoyed it. Recommend.
Negative rumors had been flying round about a Presidential affair, so it was easy to accept the story to accept the pretest6 story of her recuperating at a Virginia horse farm. Everyone, including Sally believed the story of the First Lady cutting off contact while she mulled her predicament and her next move. That is... until the arrival of a ransom note and the First lady's finger (yuck)!!!
This is one book with twists and turns at every bend. I was impressed with the story and found many angles that kept me guessing. WOW, what a read. RECOMMEND. Story worth your while.
Here's a quote from Patterson: " Your may want to read THE FIRST LADY twice--first for the enjoyment, and then for the joy of figuring out how they did what they did."
Grace Fuller Tucker, who is the President’s wife and the First Lady of the piece, leaves the White House and within a few hours manages to elude her Secret Service detail, disappearing from a horse camp for children that she had championed during the course of her White House tenure. Parker Hoyt, the man who has ruthlessly guided Tucker’s political career from its inception, begins doing damage control. Tucker and Hoyt task Sally Grissom, the Secret Service agent who is the head of the Presidential Protection Division, to find Grace. Grissom is not inclined to do so, but Hoyt, with a ruthlessness that is chilling, persuades her to do just that. For reasons of his own, Hoyt would like Grace to be found but doesn’t want her back. So he makes other arrangements that are cold and calculating in their redundancy and are neither shared with nor approved by Tucker.
Meanwhile, Grissom, with the assistance of Grace’s protection team, can’t locate her, but what they do find is a ransom note with proof that whoever wrote it has the First Lady in their custody. There is also a race going on, that being for Grissom and her team to find Grace before Hoyt’s plans for her come to fruition. In the meantime, readers are delightfully tossed here and there by the devious twists and turns that Patterson and DuBois have created in this fast-moving, edge-of-your-seat story.
Once you start, there is no good place to stop, other than the very end. It is full of surprises, so much so that you’ll keep reading just to find the next one. Patterson and DuBois also pull off the neat trick of almost totally removing Grace from the story physically, even as she remains the focal point of it. You may want to read THE FIRST LADY twice --- first for the enjoyment, and then for the joy of figuring out how the authors did what they did.
Good Book!! Highly Recommend. Happy Reading!!!