"Take it from me, getting yourself shot hurts like hell."
When the latest assignment for ex--Special Forces soldier turned bodyguard Charlie Fox, ends in a bloody shootout in a frozen forest of New Hampshire, she's left fighting for her life, with her client dead. Simone Kerse had just become a lottery millionaire but never lived long enough to enjoy her riches. Charlie was supposed to keep Simone's troublesome ex-boyfriend at bay and accompany her on a trip to track down the father Simone had never really known---a relatively low-risk job. But Simone's father has secrets in his past that are about to come back and haunt him, and the arrival of his long-lost daughter may be the catalyst that blows his whole world apart. But the closer Charlie gets to the truth, the bigger threat she becomes. Only this time she's in no fit state to protect anyone, least of all herself….
Zoë Sharp spent most of her formative years living aboard a catamaran on the northwest coast of England. She opted out of mainstream education at the age of twelve and wrote her first novel at fifteen. She became a freelance photojournalist in 1988 and started writing her Charlie Fox crime thriller series after receiving death-threats in the course of her work.
🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟 adventure with extreme danger and emotional intensity
Second Shot described Charlie’s second American gig as a bodyguard in which things go terribly wrong. Indeed, Charlie committed the cardinal sin of bodyguards - she outlived her principal… just barely.
Though it’s book six, Second Shot can be read as a standalone story. By the end of chapter one, it looked as though it could have literally been a standalone - for Charlie was dying. This was a stupendous opening chapter. Chapter two picked up the storyline from the beginning of Charlie’s assignment to protect both lottery-winner Simone and Ella, her 4-year old daughter, and then the story continues with the events that preceded chapter 1. Once caught up to chapter 1 and for the remainder of the story, we see Charlie be very vulnerable both physically and emotionally, as she heaped reproaches upon herself. This is one protagonist who is incredibly hard on herself. All of this just makes her put in a Herculean effort to protect the 4-year old daughter who sneaks into Charlie's heart and is the sole heiress to her mother's millions.
Charlie’s boss and lover, Sean Meyer, was a key figure in the story as well. Not only because of these roles, but Zoe Sharp used him to contrast these two former soldiers’ outlook on their lethal abilities and their emotional comfort with that ability. As Charlie has observed, Sean has no problem with killing in less than dire circumstances. He’s at ease with his killer instinct whereas Charlie is not. As Sean said to Charlie’s father:
"Charlie was a damned good soldier. Her ability to kill - which scares the shit out of you so much - was always there… Charlie is not a normal person."
Driven by fear, Charlie’s eminent surgeon consultant father has been too quick to label his only daughter a “psychopath.” Although Charlie is lethal, yes, she finds no joy in killing. She is instead plagued by guilt. She is one terrifically complex, intriguing heroine. I strongly recommend reading her earlier books to see how Charlie has evolved.
I find all Zoe's work hard to put down and this didn't break the mould. Second Shot is the first of the Charlie Fox series to introduce a child character into the mix. It shows us a softer side of Charlie's make-up. She obviously can't be a parent as well as doing the work she is naturally fitted for, but guarding a mother with a four-year-old brings her maternal instincts to the fore. That they're distinctly tigerish should be no surprise to readers of this series.
The "second shot" of the title hits Charlie when she hesitates to shoot for fear of hitting, or traumatizing, the child who is being abducted. This is also a narrative in which Charlie's brain has to be more important than her physical skill and military training, since the second half of the book has her opting to continue her work while recuperating from two major gunshot wounds - and no, she doesn't grapple with nightclub bouncers or sprint after wrongdoers in impossibly high heels. That's what I like about Ms Fox - she achieves her results in a realistic manner and with believable emotions, convictions and doubts beneath what she does so well.
Not as good a story as the earlier books. It was a bit long-winded & didn't hold my interest as well as the others. Marked down because I'm tired of the soul-searching: the antagonists would have killed Charlie without a quiver of conscience, so she can be good or she can be dead. I wish Sharp would just let her get on with it. Let the father do his bit, but stop Charlie helping him undermine her. I'm going to have a break from these for a while because one more time - did I have a choice? or did I choose to kill? am I the psychopath my father thinks me? - & I may give up on them altogether. This would be a shame as they're pretty well-written, entertaining thrillers, on the whole.
Charlie Fox is requested to protect a newly-rich lottery winner who is searching for her estranged father. Things fall apart pretty quickly leaving Charlie with 2 bullet wounds and the lottery winner dead. Lots of action and an interesting plot.
I liked that the author changed the formula on this one. It was fun puzzling through "How did it ever come to this?" and then "How will this ever get resolved?" Every book gets better but my feelings about Sean don't.
It’s been a while since I read a book in the Charlie Fox series and then once I get back into them I seem to want to stay there. I started with book 5, and then went straight onto this one. I must say this book for me stood out from the first few pages. Charlie and Sean meet up with their new client Simone and her daughter Ella. It seems that the attention her ex-boyfriend is paying her is verging on dangerous. From the first few chapters we get to see a new side to Charlie. In previous books she hasn’t really had much interaction with children, yet in this one we get to see a different side to her.
As the story progresses we get to around that halfway point and re-join the book from the opening few pages (if you see what I mean). Charlie wakes in a hospital bed recovering from some serious injuries following a shoot out. This was also an element of the story I liked, seeing Charlie not at her best and in particular very vulnerable. As usual Sean Meyer her boss is around to watch her back, and their ongoing relationship is one that keeps my interest too. There are plenty of ‘heart stopping’ moments in this book and I loved the extra layers of mystery surrounding the main crux of the story. This particular book in the Fox series kept me so captivated I finished it in a day.
The ending seemed like a new beginning too for Charlie and as I finished the Epilogue, I found myself checking what book I needed next!!! I think with Charlie and Sean relocated and now living over the water, there are endless possibilities as to where things could go. This is by far my favourite Zoe Sharp book of the series to date and it had everything you want to see in a series that is in my opinion, getting stronger with each book that’s written. I think Zoe Sharp fans will love this addition, I know I did.
SECOND SHOT (Lic. Invest-Charlie Fox-London, Boston, New Hampshire-Cont) - Poor Sharp, Zoë – 6th in series Thomas Dunne Books, 2007, US Hardcover – ISBN: 0312358954
First Sentence: Take it from me, getting yourself shot hurts like hell.
Simone Kerde won multi-millions in the lottery and her greatest wish is to get to know the father that left them when she was very young. She is being hounded by the press and feels threatened by her ex-boyfriend, the father of her 4-year-old daughter.
Private bodyguard, Charlie Fox, is hired to take Simone and her daughter to Boston, where a private investigator, where they meet Simone’s father. What should have been a joyous reunion turns deadly with Charlie a target.
Sharp always knows just how to grasp the reader’s attention with the opening line. However, exciting though it may be, opening the story with a climatic scene and then telling the main story in flashback is not a technique of which I am particularly fond.
Sharp also used foreshadowing, which I find unnecessary and annoying. I prefer to have the story build as it otherwise seems a bit of a cheat. But that’s just me.
There were many more things which bothered me about this book than that. Sean, for being Charlie’s lover, seemed very cavalier about Charlie’s concerns. Many of Charlie’s actions and decisions seemed incredibly stupid for someone who is a professional bodyguard.
For me, the best thing was the sense of place when the book was in Boston and North Conway, New Hampshire. These are locations I know well and it was fun to visit them with Charlie.
That, however, was not enough to make up for, what was otherwise, an over-the-top plot that left me almost as cold as a New England winter.
I was given this by a friend with the advice "she's the female Jack Reacher", but because I like to read series in order I tracked down the 5 previous instalments as ebooks and read them all first. I think each book could be read as a standalone but you get much more from them by knowing the backstory. In this one Charlie takes a job guarding a young woman who has recently won millions on the lottery and needs protection for herself and her 4 yr old daughter while she tracks down her estranged father in America. The action is fast-paced and Charlie is bolshy as always. As ever she is horrible to her father who never fails to come running when she needs him, but lets Sean, who is never around when she needs him, behave like a jerk. I do like that she always fights her own battles rather than having to be rescued all the time. Really great series.
Poor Charlie just keeps getting shot! She still hadn't fully recovered from her last trip to America (in the previous book) and now she's back to working as security for a mother and child. Supposed to be an easy protection gig--how hard is it to keep away the press and an ex-boyfriend? But Charlie ends up shot and severely wounded, and her security team is threatened. The mystery is big--people aren't telling the truth, and, of course, Charlie ends up saving the day. While being a complete badass.
I think this is my favorite Charlie Fox book yet. While hoping to not give anything away, throughout the book, we see a real, and believable, transition in Charlie. I felt genuinely bad for her by the end of the book but also happy she seems to have broken through to who I have wanted her to become. Furthermore, I never figured out any of the usual twists along the way. I thought I had, and every time I was completely wrong. Fantastic book... moving on to Third Strike.
Probably my least favorite of the series to date. Charlie is guilt ridden and Simone is a train wreck. Much of Charlie's actions are supposed tombs explained and/ or redeemed by her feelings for Ella, but I never "believed" that attachment. Of course, I also didn't honk she needed redemption, either...
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This is the second Charlie Fox novel I have read and it's quickly shot it's way near to the top of my favorite series. This one takes place shortly after the first book I dive into, First Drop.
Charlie's boss (and on again off again lover) Sean's protection firm is engaged by the solicitors (to use the British term) of a lottery winner, Simone. Charlie's task is to be bodyguard for Simone and Ella, her four year old daughter. The main threat seems to come from Simone's estranged husband, Matt, who is trying to get back into the lives of the suddenly rich women by any means necessary.
Simone is also engaged in an active search for her long lost father, a quest that sends Charlie with the women to Boston and eventually northern New Hampshire where the threats to Simone and Ella double and triple. It's no spoiler to reveal that Charlie takes a bullet (in fact a pair) as it happens in the very first chapter and the next third of the book details Charlie's journey until that point.
The book moves along quickly, even though Charlie is hobbled by the shooting and comes to a climatic showdown. I like the character of Charlie, who has doubts about herself but can still dig deep for that inner reserve of steel when the chips are down. Highly recommended for both fans of mysteries and action novels. I can't wait to dig into the next book!
One note: having grown up in New Hampshire, I am familiar with the setting of the second half of the book and the author does a great job of describing the North Conway area and using its setting perfectly.
Charlie Fox has got to be the dumbest and most lax body guard out there. Anyone this careless in reality wouldn't last a month. Evidently her 'principals' don't make it very long on her watch either. Plus evidently when she is involved in a crime or death there is no inquest and the police are bumblers also. Just too ridiculous for me.
Non-stop action with memorable characters. This series keeps getting better and better. Thriller lovers will want to read the whole series, preferably in sequence. Enjoy!
What a lot of twists and turns lots of action Kept Me on the edge of my seat through out Very fast pace and action packed , Looking forward to more of the same .
This didn't quite work for me. The opening scene is a crucial one. Then we go to flashback, but unfortunately it's way too much flashback -- 100 pages in, and we're still inching toward our starting point, and it's not turning out to be something I want to read for 100 pages. So.
Zoe Sharpe continues to develop her Charlie Fox character and create complex, thrilling stories. The relationships take on a deeper meaning also. Great fun!
don't usually enjoy stories that start at the end but this was okay. characters okay, plot okay, might try another charlie fox story, not sure. (so articulate)