Confronted by divorce, bankruptcy, and other problems, Aiden Page is delighted to seize the opportunity to disappear when a horrible tragedy convinces everyone that he has been killed, but his love for his teenage daughter leads him to make contact, a call that alerts his enemies that he--and the dangerous secret he possesses--still exist. 25,000 first printing.
Nail biting thriller. Aiden Page is the CFO of a company that had its offices in the Twin Towers when the terrorist attic happened on 9/11. Aiden and Charlie Page brothers are brothers, and the attack allowed them to walk away from their failing business, failing marriages and former lives in investing. Aiden's daughter gets a phone call from Aiden and he only says one word, her childhood nickname. Morgan knows he is alive. So she works on figuring out a way to get to the "Island" where Charlie and Aiden agreed to meet when everything went wrong. But, there is more to the story of their failing business and now other hostile people are after Aiden and Morgan since the story is much bigger than their business failing. And the island may not be as safe as they think. Lots of action and adventure. But if you aren't a sailor you will need a sailing dictionary. Great story and a great writer!
If you love great adventurous thrillers on the water, you would love the Ripple Effect. It's one year after 9/11, and Aiden Page is presumed dead from the Twin Towers crash, along with his brother. Little did they know, that both of them escaped and hiding out--AIden's in trouble with the law, while Charlie's in paradise. And when Aiden accidentally called his daughter Morgan, it sent her on a sailing mission to find and reconnect with her dad, while they were other people after him for different reasons. And when they meet, their reunion is more than bittersweet. What a great suspense novel!
The storyline was good, but I'd only recommend this book for someone who is familiar with sailing and enjoys reading a lot of detail about sailing and boating (complete with the particular terms and language familiar to sailors). I don't have any interest in boating and found those parts extremely boring. But, having said that, I think that this would be a great book for those who are interested in sailing and boating and was probably written for that particular and specific audience.
Brothers survive the WTC disaster - but disappear. Everyone thinks they are dead, even the other brother. They sail to an island in the south pacific where they meat up with their old business partner. One of the men's daughter sails to the island, believing that her father is still alive. Good story about boating, etc.
It was too disjointed between the characters. Was the main protagonist Aiden? Morgan? It's like he couldn't decide. And after some interaction with Charlie, he just drops him until the end. I think he wrote the end first, then the beginning, then tried to make it meet in the middle.
I'm a sucker for sea stories and this is a great one. I've read this book twice then loaned it to a friend. It is another real page turner. I would recommend it to anyone.