The Chase by Candice Fox
Synopsis /
When more than 600 of the world’s most violent human beings pour out from Pronghorn Correctional Facility into the Nevada Desert, the biggest manhunt in US history begins.
But for John Kradle, this is his one chance to prove his innocence, five years after the murder of his wife and child.
He just needs to stay one step ahead of the teams of law enforcement officers he knows will be chasing the escapees down.
Death Row Supervisor turned fugitive-hunter Celine Osbourne is single-minded in her mission to catch Kradle. She has very personal reasons for hating him – and she knows exactly where he’s heading
My Thoughts /
This is my first time reading Aussie Author, Candice Fox.
When more than 600 of the world’s most violent human beings pour out from Pronghorn Correctional Facility into the Nevada Desert, the biggest manhunt in US history begins.
Can we just start with that first sentence - 600 of the world’s most violent human beings…..I want to say, ‘escape’, but I don’t feel that’s really appropriate in deference to the inmates of Pronghorn. I think it’s more prudent to say ‘strolled’. No, no, I think something quicker….so let’s say ‘skedaddle’. They skedaddled out of Pronghorn Correctional.
It’s the day of the annual pre-Christmas softball game between the inmates versus correctional officers, from the Pronghorn Correctional Facility. An event designed to appease the prison staff stuck minding vicious criminals during the holiday season while their families gathered at home. A bus, travelling with twelve women, eight men and fourteen children on board (all families of the guards inside the prison) is nearing the correctional facility, when it’s ambushed by a sniper. Prison warden, Grace Slanter receives a phone call:-
’Pay attention. There’s a bus stopped in the desert half a mile from the prison walls. The bus driver is dead. Are you listening, Grace?’
‘I’m listening. What do you want?’ she said.
‘I want you to let them out’.
‘Which inmates are we talking about?’ Grace asked.
‘All of them’, the voice said.
Hmmmm, so what’s the disadvantage to beginning your book with 600+ people escaping prison I ask myself? Well, I answer myself, where to from there? The plot is ridiculous, but, if you can suspend (your) disbelief, it's a really enjoyable book. Fox is able to masterfully transform the story from a plot-driven novel to more of a character-driven novel. There’s a plane heist, (more than) several shoot-outs, a plethora of serial murderers, rapists, a paedophile, a would-be terrorist, and a neo-Nazi responsible for a mass shooting! And they are all running around in a murderous frenzy, causing havoc and chaos everywhere! The storyline is busy and the character portrayals are many but you won’t have any problem keeping up with the huge cast as they are each as memorable as the other. The story unfurls at a fast pace and offers plenty of action.
Death Row supervisor Captain Celine Osbourne is determined to make it her mission to capture one particular death-row inmate, John Kradle, or, Inmate Number 1707. But there’s a hiccup. Even though Kradle has been convicted of murdering his wife, son and sister-in-law, he maintains he’s innocent. He implores Osbourne to take a long hard look at his case. So, if Kradle didn’t kill his family – who did? With this unexpected turn of events and his chance at [freedom], Kradle seizes the opportunity to return home to Mesquite to find his family’s killer before Osbourne and the authorities can close in on him.
Osbourne teams up with minimum security inmate Walter Keeper in her quest to hunt down Kradle. Keeps (People call me ForKeeps, or just Keeps for short) was scheduled for permanent release the day after the breakout happened, so was sitting in his cell watching it all go down. In his words ’I’m scheduled for release tomorrow, so I wasn’t going nowhere today.
The dialogue in The Chase is sharp, with plenty of dry one-liners, snappy comebacks and characteristically quirky humorous conversations between characters. With themes like guilt v. innocence, bad v. good, and crime and punishment make this a very compelling read.
‘The next time?....Keeps, most inmates don’t make plans for the next time they’ll be in prison while they’re packing their things to leave’.
‘I’m not most inmates’, he said. ‘I’m what you call a “forward-thinking man”.’