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Thrillers and Suspense August 2016
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"It's impossible to know how Ray and Roy McNulty might have turned out if they hadn't been raised by two violent, ignorant drunks." ~ from Michael Lawson's House Revenge
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Off the grid : a Joe Pickett novel
by C. J Box
When a small team of elite professional special operators recruit him to help defeat a domestic terror cell in Wyoming's Red Desert in exchange for expunging his criminal record, Nate Romanowski, assisted by Joe Pickett, discovers a sinister agenda behind the operation. By the best-selling author of Endangered. (suspense). Simultaneous.
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| The Asset by Shane KuhnThriller. Still grieving the loss of his sister 15 years ago on 9/11, Kennedy is a security expert consulting for the TSA, traveling across the U.S. training agents to detect threats. He's good. So good, in fact, that a clandestine organization wants his help neutralizing a terrorist with global plans. With plenty of action and a tantalizing twist or two, The Asset is an "exhilarating" (Publishers Weekly) read, but it's Kennedy himself -- iron-willed yet still a bit tender -- who sets this novel apart. |
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| House Revenge by Michael LawsonPolitical Thriller. In the 11th book to star political "fixer" Joe DeMarco, an elderly woman's request for help from her Congressman starts an ugly turf war with a real-estate developer. Feisty old Elinore Dobbs doesn't want to move, but the developer stands to make a mint if he can force her out; Minority House Leader John Mahoney is insulted when the developer doesn't acquiesce to his request to back off, and when Elinore suffers an "accident," both Mahoney and DeMarco are out for blood. Swift pacing and a bit of violence keeps the plot moving along, while the developer's shady source of financing adds some intrigue. |
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| Let the Devil Out: A Maureen Coughlin Novel by Bill LoehfelmSuspense Fiction. Rookie cop Maureen Coughlin is on administrative leave (read book #3 of the series, Doing the Devil's Work, to find out why) and has taken to the streets of New Orleans, passing the time with various vices and occasionally beating up threatening men. Despite these violent tendencies, the troubled, complex cop is eventually given the chance to get her badge back, allowing her to act on her obsession with the white supremacists she's already sparred with. With a pulsing New Orleans setting and a one-of-a-kind protagonist, the series is best read from the beginning, when Maureen was a Staten Island bartender who saw something she shouldn't have (The Devil She Knows). |
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| The Last One: A Novel by Alexandra OlivaPsychological Suspense. When Zoo agreed to join a reality TV show that places its contestants in a large forest, testing their survival skills, she thought it would be one final adventure before starting a family. Quickly becoming a leading contender, she's impressed and a little disturbed with the quality of the props -- the empty towns and decaying corpses (and the disappearing cameramen) really lend a moody atmosphere to her challenges. But eventually she's forced to consider that they may not be props, that the world around her is rapidly falling apart, and that the safety net she's assumed is there is no longer an option. A psychologically complex debut, this one's a good bet for fans of Margaret Atwood's Oryx and Crake...or TV's Survivor. |
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The games
by James Patterson
Two years after averting disaster while overseeing security for the World Cup, Jack Morgan, the head of international investigation firm Private, returns to Rio to secure the Olympics, only to confront a Brazilian saboteur who is hatching a lethal plot. By a #1 best-selling author. 500,000 first printing.
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| City of the Lost by Kelley ArmstrongSuspense Fiction. When she was 18, Casey Duncan killed a man. Never caught, she eventually became a police detective, but it seems likely that the dead man's mob-connected family is on her trail. Meanwhile, her best friend Diana is being terrorized by her ex-husband, who's also got it out for Casey. Both looking to lie low, they head to a secretive off-the-grid community built for people who need to disappear -- a place where Casey's skills are in need, given that there appears to be a murderer in their midst. An eerie setting amps up the suspense as character backgrounds come to light, putting Casey in more danger than ever. |
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| City of Thieves: A Novel by David BenioffHistorical Thriller. During the World War II siege of Leningrad, Lev Beniov is jailed for looting a German soldier's body. The timid teenager shares a cell with 20-year-old Kolya, a handsome, charismatic Cossack deserter; both are due to be executed for their infractions. To save their lives, they accept a colonel's offer -- find a dozen eggs for his daughter's wedding cake, and they will be spared. But there are no eggs to be found in the starving city. And when they go behind enemy lines, they take on an even more dangerous task that will keep you anxiously turning the pages. |
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| Terminal City by Linda FairsteinSuspense Fiction. In this 16th in the bestselling series starring New York City Assistant DA Alex Cooper, a series of horribly mutilated bodies suggests that the President's upcoming trip to Manhattan is under threat. Additional clues point to the killer hiding out in Grand Central Station, a monolithic building with cavernous underground levels thought to house around 600 people. Once again, author Linda Fairstein makes New York -- its grit as well as its glamour -- a character in its own right, while the changing relationships between Alex and the two detectives she's working with (Mike Chapman and Mercer Wallace) add depth to the story. |
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| Angel City by Jon SteeleThriller. Opening with a brief prologue set in the 13th century as the Cathars fight the Crusaders, the action quickly moves to modern-day Paris, where terrorists threaten the city's center. Tangled up in Jay Harper's quest to prevent a nuclear explosion is his hunt for a Cathar treasure. Since the story follows closely on the heels of the author's previous novel, The Watchers, newcomers to this supernaturally tinged thriller should start there (and then end with the 3rd in the trilogy, The Way of Sorrows). A bit of romance and some humor help lighten what is otherwise an increasingly terrifying situation. |
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Contact your librarian for more great books!
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