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![]() The Prey Series Virgil Flowers The Kidd Series Other Novels Dead Watch Etcetera | Dead Watch Booklist April, 2006 by Wes Lukowski Former Virginia senator Lincoln Bowe is missing. His wife,
Madison, believes his bitter political rival, Governor Arlo Goodman, is behind
it. Critics scoff until she reveals a security tape showing two men loosely
affiliated with Goodman threatening her in her home. Bowe's disappearance is a
political time bomb. The presidential conventions are just over the horizon,
and both parties fear the consequences if it detonates. The president, through his chief of staff, hires Jake Winter
to investigate. Bowe's body is found soon after Winter initiates his
investigation. Bowe was not a saint: his sexual dalliances, with both men and
women, were numerous, and his obsession with destroying Goodman's political
career may have driven him to contemplate political blackmail. Winter has
plenty of suspects to choose from, and he knows the answer can be found
somewhere in Washington's backrooms, where third-string campaign dirty
tricksters change allegiances like other people change socks. Sandford, the best-selling author of the Prey series,
displays an insider's knowledge of political infighting and couples it with his
skill at creating memorable characters working through the maze of a diabolical
plot. (Readers of a certain age will be reminded of Ross Thomas, grand master
of the D.C. thriller from an earlier era.) The real Washington is awash with
its own scandals and political time bombs, so expect readers to flock to this
funhouse-mirror reflection of the real thing. Kirkus Reviews March, 2006 The disappearance of a high-profile politician lights the fuse
in Sandford's latest high-octane, low-logic thriller. Even after losing the Virginia governor's race to Arlo Goodman
and then losing his Senate seat to an undistinguished Goodman protege, Lincoln
Bowe has kept right on speaking out against Goodman and all his works
especially the Watchmen, a network of Goodman's citizen-activists Bowe likens
to neo-Nazis. Now Bowe has vanished after a typically fiery speech, gone
missing in the company of some suits who spirited him away. Madison Bowe, his
wife, is convinced that Watchmen were inside those suits. Bill Danzig, the
president's chief of staff, isn't so sure. But he is convinced that whatever
happened to Bowe, the story is explosive. Attempting to stay ahead of its
developments, Danzig calls in Jacob Winter, a go-to guy with a Special Forces
pedigree who bills himself as a forensic bureaucrat, and tells him to find
Bowe. Jake is too late to help Bowe, who's already dead. But he may not be too
late to contain an improbable cascade of scandals that hover around Bowe and
threaten to bring down the president. In order to do his job, though, Jake will
need to stay out of the lethal crossfire between the armed and dangerous
Watchmen and Bowe's own friends, allies and ex-lovers, who turn out to be every
bit as shady, determined and ruthless. In the expert hands of Sandford (Broken Prey, 2005, etc.), the story flies along,
keeping the action at such a furious pace, even without a high body count, that
few readers will notice the glaring coincidences, the leaps of logic and the
monumental good luck Jake needs to succeed as detective, lover (you'll never
guess who he falls for) andsurvivor. Not as tightly woven as Sandford's best,
but reliable thrills with some unexpected political overtones from a pro's
pro. Publishers Weekly March, 2006 When Lincoln Bowe, a controversial Republican ex-senator,
disappears at the start of this fast-paced thriller from bestseller Sandford
(Broken Prey), the White House puts Jacob
Winter, a veteran political operative with "an uncanny ability to navigate the
world of bureaucracy," on the case. Bowe vanished shortly after making a fiery
speech denouncing a rival, Arlo Goodman, the governor of Virginia and a
demagogue who heads a volunteer militia group known as the Watchmen. When
Bowe's burnt and headless corpse turns up, Winter is under even more pressure
to discover those behind his murder. Aided by the dead man's attractive and
possibly duplicitous widow, Madison, the fixer follows a trail of corpses and
deception that suggests the killing may have been a staged piece of theater
intended to derail Goodman's ascent to the presidency. Readers interested in a
quick diverting romp without much gravitas will enjoy this, but serious Beltway
fiction junkies might prefer their political thrillers to be a little more
plausible. |
13 May 2008 The Prey series, the Virgil Flowers series,
the Kidd series, The Night Crew, Dead Watch, The Eye
and the Heart: The Watercolors of John Stuart Ingle, and Plastic
Surgery: The Kindest Cut are copyrighted by John Sandford. All excerpts are
used with permission. All original content on the website (excluding the message
board and some other specifically disclaimed text) is copyright © 2008 by
Roswell Anthony Camp. Please do not steal anything from these pages. If you
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