Look, even a disappointing Harlan Coben novel is still a damn good read. "One False Movie," for the most part, is an excellent thriller that you can't put down. Yes, once you've read a number of Coben thrillers (as I have), you begin to see through his verbiage, and technique, and perhaps grow tired of it. However, the fact remains, for me at least, that Coben has a way with story that remains both compelling and fun through each and every novel.
The set-up is terrific, what with former NCAA basketball star-turned Federal agent-turned sports agent Myon Bolitar commissioned to protect the life of women's basketball star/doctor-in-training Brenda Slaughter. Myron Bolitar is a great character, what with him being a man's man with a catch. No superhero, Bolitar is the strange combination of smart-ass cynic, vulnerable, sensitive humanist...and at times, damsel in distress. Unlike every other hero, Myron Bolitar needs help, and can definitely not fight the bad guys all on his own. His partner in crime Win, is both literally and figuratively Bolitar's alter-ego...the cold, lethal weapon, millionaire-playboy. Their interplay alone is what makes all of the Myron Bolitar novels worth reading.
That all said, "One False Move" was a letdown in the end, with "in the end" being the key words here. After going through pages and pages of fun twists and turns involving missing persons, mobsters, corrupt political candidates, corrupt and non-corrupt police officers, and of course dead bodies, the trail ends with a wimper. Bolitar finally discovers who the REAL villain is in the story, then lets her go, so that another person can murder her in the most painful, violent way possible...as least we are told. However, the reader never gets to experience any of this. Instead, we just get Bolitar confronting evil Aunt Mabel, letting her know he knows she murdered the entire Slaughter family (Horrace, Anita, and Brenda) for money, and then walking away. Worse, Bolitar tells only one person about it, Arthur Bradford, who then takes care of the murder himself (or by his hired assassin). Yuck. What kind of ending is that? Harlan Coben doesn't even give the reader clues that leads Bolitar to conclude that Aunt Mabel was the murderer all alone. Instead, he skips over these scenes, allowing Bolitar to only mention it after the fact. Very disappointing, especially considering how good the rest of the book was. What SHOULD have happened? Very simple. Myron Bolitar kills Aunt Mabel, perhaps even tortures her to death. THEN he calls Arthur Bradford to help him clean up and cover up the crime. All of this, would be consistent with both his character, and as a man who confronts the murderer of people that he loved. Plus, this would only add to the beauty of Myron Bolitar being both a flawed and hypocritical, character, which counterbalance his noble and heroic personality.
Did I enjoy "One False Move" just the same? Sure. Yet it could have been so much better with a more satisfying finale.