This will be one of my shorter returns, similar to the shorter length of this novel.
“Steal” is the third Dr. Dylan Reinhart and Elizabeth Needham novel. Following “Killer Instinct” in 2019 and “Murder Games” in 2017 (all three co-written with Howard Roughan). Dr. Dylan Reinhart is an Ivy league professor and published expert on criminal behavior and ex-CIA agent. Elizabeth Needham is an aggressive NYPD detective currently serving on an elite field unit with the Joint Terrorism Task Force.
This outing starts with one of Dylan’s student’s, Carter von Oehson, posting an Instagram that he plans to commit suicide and then disappears. However, Carter’s father refuses to believe his son is dead, and trying to hide family secrets from police, he hires Dylan to find him. Along with Elizabeth, the two of them find themselves involved with not only a missing person, but also an incredibly rare Monet painting, untouchable Russian and New York mafia crime bosses, life-threatening danger, and triple cross that no one could see coming…
Like a typical Patterson mystery, the plot is fast-paced with a lot of running around New York city as Dylan and Elizabeth try to find the missing student. What I looked the most about this one was the plotting and development of the storylines. Patterson did a good job of outlining an interesting mystery and timed the twists and turns throughout in a pretty well delivered manner. That is, until the second half of the book, in which things slowed down and the plot stagnated and reality was left behind (but then who ever reads Patterson for realism?).
Unfortunately, an outcome of focusing so much on the plotting was weakly developed characters, which is also a known Patterson trademark. In addition, this was one of Patterson’s shorter novels, clocking in at 358 pages.
The first half of this book was an enjoyable, “mind candy” or “entertaining popcorn” read, worthy of three stars. The falloff in the second half was barely worthy of two stars. Overall, it was not his best, nor his worst – a 2.5-star rating – which is a prime example of why I get his books from the library, because I don’t find him good enough to buy and keep in my library. He’s simple, fast-paced, detective and mystery- oriented adventures that can be read in about two to three days and easily left behind. Nothing super memorable, but a nice casual weekend escape.