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Showing posts with label Financial Scandals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Financial Scandals. Show all posts
Monday, January 18, 2021
Unlikable Characters Make Engrossing Thriller a Depressing, Dissatisfying Read
8:48 AM
(Image from Barnes & Noble)
Former whistleblower Nora Trier has built a successful career as a forensic accountant. For the last 15 years, she has spent her days combing through financial records searching out fraud, but she's still surprised by her newest case. Strike, a billion-dollar home-grown premium athletics brand, is on the verge of hosting a huge kickboxing competition with an unprecedented prize—the winner earns $20 million and the chance to be Strike's new spokesperson. The problem? The coveted prize money has gone missing. Strike's owners, Gregg Abbott and his wife, famous kickboxing champion Logan Russo, have suspicions about where it might be and who might have taken it, but no one knows for sure. With one week before it's to be awarded, the money needs to be found. Gregg is convinced that only Nora has the expertise to find it.
Nora prides herself on her objectivity, but she has more than one secret connection to Strike. Can she investigate the company fairly? The further she delves into its financial transactions as well as the personal lives of its owners and employees, the more concerned she becomes. With whispers of embezzlement, betrayal, and sabotage in the air, Nora's not sure what to believe. All she knows is that the evidence is leading in a disturbing direction. As she gets closer and closer to the truth, Nora's position becomes more and more dangerous. Someone doesn't want her to find out what's really happening at Strike. Who would do the unthinkable to keep the truth hidden?
I enjoyed the two books I've read by Mindy Mejia, so I picked up her newest assuming it would be just as enticing. Strike Me Down definitely sucked me in and kept me reading. I whipped through its pages because I wanted to know what was going to happen next. The plot kept me guessing, which is something I always appreciate in mysteries/thrillers. Unfortunately, though, I just could not stand any of the novel's main characters. Nora and Logan are both cold, selfish women who are admirable in some ways but still almost wholly unlikable. Gregg is greedy, unfaithful, and overly obsessed with Strike. By the end of the novel, I found all of them so repulsive that I didn't care much what happened to any of them. So, while Strike Me Down is an engrossing page turner that held my attention, for me it ended up being a depressing, dissatisfying read because I hated the characters so much. Bummer.
(Readalikes: No specific titles are coming to mind. You?)
Grade:
Thursday, December 03, 2015
Mary Higgins Clark: Because Old Habits Are Hard to Break
8:44 AM
(Image from Barnes & Noble)
Lane Harmon loves her job as the sole assistant to Glady Harper, a notoriously demanding Manhattan interior decorator who caters to the rich and famous. The only thing that delights the 30-year-old more is her beautiful 4-year-old daughter, Katie. Although they were married only a year, Lane will never stop missing the child's father, who died in a car accident five years ago. Still, she must look forward, for surely a bright, successful future lies ahead for both herself and little Katie.
When Glady receives a commission to decorate a New Jersey townhouse, Lane is shocked to learn it belongs to Anne Bennett, the wife of a financier who disappeared two years before after stealing five billion dollars from his clients. She's even more surprised by how sympathetically she feels toward the sickly woman. Then, Lane meets Anne's son, 37-year-old Eric Bennett. Rumored to be in cahoots with his disgraced father, the stock trader is not at all what Lane expected. Using his own money to repay the funds stolen by his dad, Eric seems to be an honest man, embarrassed and concerned for the victims of the financial scandal. Is he everything he appears to be? As Lane falls harder and harder for handsome Eric, she must decide if he can really be trusted.
In the meantime, the Bennetts are being stalked by an angry man who lost everything because of the elder Mr. Bennett's scheming. Lane's association with Eric is putting her directly in the path of a murderous victim. Will she survive his wrath? Can the undercover FBI agent who's watching everything unfold stop a killer before he strikes? Or will young Katie be orphaned before she has a chance to start kindergarten?
I've talked about my long history with Mary Higgins Clark several times on this blog. When I was in junior high and high school, her pulse-pounding novels kept me up way, way past my bedtime on many occasions. Her engrossing mysteries kept me riveted with their seductively short chapters, intense plotting, and dramatic finales. The Queen of Suspense knew how to keep me mesmerized, that's for sure. As the years wore on, I noticed Clark's game slipping. Her newer novels just haven't had the same pizzazz as her oldies-but-goodies. And yet, I can't seem to stop myself from reading them.
Naturally, then, I had to pick up The Melody Lingers On when it came out in June of this year. The novel offered exactly what I've come to expect from Clark these days—a quick, uncomplicated mystery; flat, but likable characters; and an exciting, if predictable plot. Nothing memorable, nothing special. Even the ending felt anti-climatic to me.
Considering how meh I've found Clark's recent novels, the question is: why do I keep reading her? Habits are hard to break, true. I also appreciate that I can always count on the 87-year-old author to provide a clean, entertaining tale that shies away from graphic language, sex, or violence. Are her books going to knock my socks off? Not anymore. Are they going to give me a couple hours of relaxing, non-taxing diversion? Absolutely. So, yeah, I'll probably remain a fan for life (even if it's a bit reluctantly). Still, I long for the good ole days when Clark's mysteries kept me glued to my seat, gnawing off my fingernails as I read, too enthralled to look away. I think I'll always love her for giving me the exhilaration of those stolen, long-ago reading hours when all my teenage anxieties disappeared as I focused on the only thing that mattered right then—whodunit. That's the beauty of a well-written mystery, the kind Clark used to pen so perfectly ...
(Readalikes: Reminds me of Mary Higgins Clark's other mystery/thrillers, of which there are many)
Grade:
If this were a movie, it would be rated:
for brief, mild language (no F-bombs), violence, and vague references to sex and rape
To the FTC, with love: Another library fine find
Monday, November 30, 2015
Slow-Building Mystery Inspired By Real-Life Fugitive An Intriguing Read
10:00 AM
(Image from Barnes & Noble)
Felix Brewer, an extravagant show-off who makes his dough off several businesses (some legal, some not), is facing prison time when he vanishes into thin air. His disappearance shocks his wife and two daughters, throwing their comfortable lives of luxury into a wild tailspin. The three Brewers have no idea what has happened to their husband and father, but what about his 23-year-old mistress, Julie Saxony? Does she know more about Felix's whereabouts than she's letting on?
Julie's disappearance—exactly a decade later—seems to indicate that she's finally flown off to meet up with her man. Until her remains are discovered in Leakin Park almost 20 years after she went missing. Maybe she knew where Felix was, maybe she didn't. Whatever secrets Julie harbored, they went with her to the grave.
Intrigued by the very cold case, retired Baltimore police detective Sandy Sanchez decides to investigate Julie's murder. As he digs into her colored past, he discovers an alarming web of lies, many of which center on one person: Felix Brewer. What really happened to the enigmatic fugitive? Did Julie Saxony die because of her connection to him? Or was her death unrelated? As Sandy untangles the threads of deceit that bind five women to Felix, he will discover some very shocking truths about one of Baltimore's greatest unsolved mysteries.
After I'm Gone, a mystery by Laura Lippman, was inspired by the real, unsolved case of Julius Salsbury, a Baltimore bookie who vanished instead of facing a possible 15-year sentence in federal prison. As colorful as his true-life counterpart, Felix Brewer makes for an alluring central character. The mystery of his disappearance is intriguing enough, but After I'm Gone focuses less on Felix's case, more on the characters and their relationships with one another. All of Lippman's story people are complex, flawed and captivating in their own ways, making their individual tales just as interesting as Felix's. The story's slow, steady build-up creates plenty of tension, forging a plot that's as exciting as it is compelling. With enough twists to keep me reading, I found After I'm Gone quite riveting indeed. Overall, I enjoyed it.
(Readalikes: Hm, I can't really think of anything. Can you?)
Grade:
If this were a movie, it would be rated:
for language, violence, and sexual content
To the FTC, with love: I received a finished copy of After I'm Gone from the generous folks at HarperCollins. Thank you!
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