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July 4, 2011
Barclay (Never Look Away) examines the consequences of ordinary citizens making criminal decisions in the wake of the recession in this believable thriller that skillfully alternates between high-octane action and a slower sense of unease. Milford, Conn., contractor Glen Garber has a lot to deal with in the wake of his wife Sheila's death in a car accident that claimed two other lives: potential lawsuits over the accident, a fire in one of his houses, his eight-year-old daughter Kelly's difficulties at school, his mother-in-law's disapproval, and abiding anger and confusion over the accident's circumstances. In addition, some of Sheila's friends make inappropriate queries into the whereabouts of her purse during the accident, and while playing a hide-and-seek game at a friend's home, Kelly overhears a disturbing conversation that triggers a series of deadly confrontations. The sorry events in Milford are a great argument for people feeling the pinch in their pocketbooks to avoid illicit trafficking in knock-off drugs, purses, and construction materials.
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August 1, 2011
Barclay's latest novel follows his staple formula of taking an ordinary guy and catching him up in something that turns out to be much bigger than it first appears.
In this case the ordinary guy is Glen Garber, whose wife, Sheila, is involved in a terrible car accident that kick-starts a series of bizarre events. The accident happened on a night when Sheila was supposed to be taking notes in a college class in a nearby town; instead she ended up dead, along with two others. The police tell Glen that Sheila was drunk and parked on a freeway access ramp when the other car hit her vehicle. Glen and his 8-year-old daughter, Kelly, take the news of her death predictably hard, but even harder for Glen is the idea that his wife, who was a social drinker at best, could have been so drunk. He also has other problems to compound his grief: His contracting business, already struggling in the economic downturn, is barely making its payroll, and Glen's worried about a house fire in a place he had under construction. As he puzzles through his emotions and confusion, a frantic Kelly calls him, asking him to pick her up from a sleepover at her best friend's house. While playing a game with her friend, Kelly has taped the girl's mom having a private conversation on her cell phone. Although the conversation means nothing to Glen at the time, the call becomes more significant when the woman turns up dead. Soon, bodies and crimes begin piling up like recently harvested timber, and Glen realizes not all is right in his world. The Canadian-based journalist twists and turns the plot with believability and spices it with plenty of suspects and suspense. In some places, his homework does seem a bit lacking, but the book remains consistently interesting and ready to please thriller fans with both its action and pacing.
Barclay has turned in a home run with plenty of edge-of-the-seat moments.
(COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)
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August 1, 2011
Building contractor Glen Barber is shattered to learn that his wife, Sheila, has died in an automobile accident that she caused, apparently the result of drinking and driving. Desperately searching for answers (his wife, he knows, would never have driven if she had been drinking, and she was not a habitual drinker), he soon discovers that the mother of his young daughter was not the woman he believed she was. Thematically, the novel is similar to Barclay's Never Look Away (in which a man also discovers that his wife has a hidden past), but this one is not a retread but rather an exploration of the theme from a different angle. Fans of the author's previous novels will find The Accident just as tightly plotted and economically written as its predecessors. Barclay definitely belongs in the company of Harlan Coben, Lisa Gardner, and Gregg Hurwitz.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)
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October 31, 2011
In Barclay’s latest thriller, things are not going well for independent contractor Glen Garber. Just as his business is on the verge of tanking, his beloved and sensible wife dies in a car crash, apparently because she was driving while intoxicated. But the real nightmare begins when Garber begins investigating the crash, thus placing his life and that of his young daughter in jeopardy. This audio version is a furious, suspenseful ride with narrator Peter Berkrot effectively maintaining the book’s pedal-to-the-metal pace and shifting smoothly from first-person to third-person narration. Berkrot also lends appropriate voices to Barclay’s characters—including a ruggedly decisive tone for Garber and an otherworldly wooziness for his secretary. A Bantam hardcover.
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Peter Robinson, author of Bad Boy
PRAISE FOR LINWOOD BARCLAY
"If you like Harlan Coben, you'll love Linwood Barclay."
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Stephen King, Entertainment Weekly
"The writing is crisp; the twists are jolting and completely unexpected."
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Tucson Citizen
"Fast-paced and with an irresistible blend of suspense and tension."
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The Wall Street Journal
"Gripping . . . unfolds with mounting tension and suspense."
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Steve Berry, author of The Jefferson Key
"Fear the Worst holds the reader in a tight grip, as good and evil match wits and wiles. Barclay pushes the envelope of suspense to the edge and beyond."
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The Washington Post
Too Close to Home
"A terrifically fast-paced suspense story."
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The Wall Street Journal
"Affecting and effective."
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Michael Connelly
No Time for Goodbye
"You won't get up until you've turned the last page."
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USA Today
"[An] anxiety-inducing thriller."