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Sto caricando le informazioni... Walk the Wire (Memory Man Series, 6) (edizione 2020)di David Baldacci (Autore)
Informazioni sull'operaWalk the Wire di David Baldacci
Books Read in 2021 (2,983) Sto caricando le informazioni...
Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. fiction, #6 in series (2020) but as with this sort of popular fiction, can easily serve as a standalone as an intro to the series/author. Also listed as Will Robie #5.5, since the character from a separate series (different skillset) also plays a part. picked up from a Little Free Library, part of my trying various popular authors I've never read before-- follows FBI investigator Amos Decker (former Ohio football player, big/tall guy, photographic memory and synesthesiac) and his partner Alex Jamison (whose main role appears to be asking lots of questions so that Decker can mansplain things to her--to be fair, they are obscure things most people wouldn't know about so it's not so bad as that, but if you're not into telling vs showing this series may not be for you). They are called in to North Dakota (lots of fracking and oil workers in the otherwise small town of London, very hot and humid in the summer with plenty of lightning storms) for a strange murder case--the victim appears to have been autopsied before being dumped in a field, but it's unknown at first what the FBI's interest in the case would be--possibly the victim knew something, possibly connected to the Brothers, a local branch of the Anabaptist group (a closed-off religious patriarchal commune), or possibly connected to a high-security military base that seems perilously close to both the Brothers and the horizontal oil drilling. not so much a mystery, as there are way too many weird parts to try to fit together, and drags a bit at first (before the second murder victim, it's a lot of talking and wondering) and the description of Robie's skill in staying still to do surveillance is mentioned twice in nearly identical ways, but overall a satisfyingly twisty suspense plot (however improbable). Jamison (and Robie's female spypartner Reed) play relatively minor roles but Jamison does help to flesh out some kind of dynamic where Decker works on his people skills. * contains at least one explosion, and some stormy weather, also a father that didn't support his gay son, and the son's subsequent suicide. Also a bunch of murders and killings, not super gory in description though. Synopsis: 'When Amos Decker and his FBI colleague Alex Jamison are called to London, North Dakota, they instantly sense that the thriving fracking town is ripe for trouble. The promise of a second gold rush has attracted an onslaught of newcomers all hoping for a windfall, and the community is growing faster than houses can be built. The sudden boom has also brought a slew of problems with it, including drugs, property crimes, prostitution—and now murder. Decker and Jamison are ordered to investigate the death of a young woman named Irene Cramer, whose body was expertly autopsied and then dumped in the open—which is only the beginning of the oddities surrounding the case. As Decker and Jamison dig into Irene's life, they are shocked to discover that the woman who walked the streets by night as a prostitute was a teacher for a local religious sect by day—a sect operating on land once owned by a mysterious government facility that looms over the entire community. London is a town replete with ruthless business owners, shady government officials, and religious outsiders, all determined to keep their secrets from coming out. When other murders occur, Decker will need all of his extraordinary memory and detective skills, and the assistance of a surprising ally, to root out a killer and the forces behind Cramer's death . . . before the boom town explodes.' From author's website Review: I am so sorry that this is the last in this series. It was surprising to see Robbie, Reed, and the Blue Man; that really supported the story. Very good story! nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
Fiction.
Mystery.
Suspense.
Thriller.
HTML:Amos Decker????the FBI consultant with a perfect memory??returns to solve a gruesome murder in a booming North Dakota oil town in the newest thriller in David Baldacci's #1 New York Times bestselling Memory Man series. When Amos Decker and his FBI colleague Alex Jamison are called to London, North Dakota, they instantly sense that the thriving fracking town is ripe for trouble. The promise of a second gold rush has attracted an onslaught of newcomers all hoping for a windfall, and the community is growing faster than houses can be built. The sudden boom has also brought a slew of problems with it, including drugs, property crimes, prostitution??and now murder. Decker and Jamison are ordered to investigate the death of a young woman named Irene Cramer, whose body was expertly autopsied and then dumped in the open??which is only the beginning of the oddities surrounding the case. As Decker and Jamison dig into Irene's life, they are shocked to discover that the woman who walked the streets by night as a prostitute was a teacher for a local religious sect by day??a sect operating on land once owned by a mysterious government facility that looms over the entire community. London is a town replete with ruthless business owners, shady government officials, and religious outsiders, all determined to keep their secrets from coming out. When other murders occur, Decker will need all of his extraordinary memory and detective skills, and the assistance of a surprising ally, to root out a killer and the forces behind Cramer's death . . . before the b Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Classificazione LCVotoMedia:
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• The characters were very well developed, and most were likable, all were relatable.
• This book takes a lot of turns and twists this way, and that like the others, but this one was smooth and easy to follow.
• Quotes:
“It only takes one bad apple and a bunch. And there is almost always one bad apple in every bunch.” (pg. 46)
“The ones who do the most in war, don’t talk about it.” (pg. 71) ( )