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Mystery/Thriller Book Reviews
False Impression
by Jeffrey Archer
St. Martin's Press, March, 2006
Hardcover, 384 pages
ISBN: 0312353723
Ordering information:
Amazon.com
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Amazon.co.uk
On September 10, 2001, the British owner of a priceless Van Gogh
painting is murdered at her estate. Before she was killed, Victoria Wentworth
wrote a letter to her sister detailing her plans to ship the painting to
financier Bryce Fenston. Fenton owns a sleazy New York-based finance
company named Fenston Finance which regularly defrauds members of the British
aristocracy by loaning them money secured by priceless works of art. Bryce's clients
never read the fine print and usually end up destitute. And sometimes they
end up dead, with their most precious assets in the hands of Fenston Finance.
Fenston's activities have not gone unnoticed by FBI agent Jack Delaney who is
ready to arrest Fenton and Fenton Finance's attractive art historian, Anna Petrescu. But
Delaney isn't sure if Anna is a crook or if she's just a dupe. Anna isn't a crook
and in fact has just realized that her boss is one. The 9/11 attacks happen just
as Anna has just been fired by Fenton after a fiery confrontation in the firm's
offices at the World Trade center.
Anna barely escapes with her life, but everyone thinks she died when the towers came down.
Anna manages to intercept the priceless painting, but now she's got the FBI
and a ruthless assassin on her tail who is determined to get the painting back for
Fenton and eliminate Anna as a threat. Jeffrey Archer's cinematical roots show through
in this fast-paced, gripping thriller that spans the globe.
A Hole in Juan
by Gillian Roberts
Hardcover, February, 2006
Ballantine Books, 256 pages
ISBN: 0345480198
Ordering information:
Amazon.com
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Amazon.co.uk
High school teacher by day and private investigator by night Amanda Pepper
has now been married for one month to Mackenzie, a former homicide detective
who is back in school studying to get his Ph. D. in criminology.
Amanda and Mackenzie have another person living with them: Mackenzie's
16 year-old nephew has been dumped on them as a house guest so that he can
recover from a broken heart which is no doubt at the root of his repeated threats to quit high school.
But it's not her houseguest that has Amanda so worried: it's the strange
occurences at the school that has all her detective's instincts screaming.
The seniors are acting very strange indeed. Her roll book disappears, then
reappears, as do various supplies in other classrooms. When physics
teacher Juan Reyes is terribly injured by an explosion in the science lab,
the police rule it as an accident -- but Amanda knows better. And if she
doesn't find out what is really going on with her students, she knows
that something even worse is going to happen at the upcoming Friday Mischief
Party.
A Hole in Juan is a tautly written mystery that resonates with
a pervasive sense of evil. Gillian Roberts controls the pacing, building the suspense
to a breathtaking conclusion. As an entertaining counterpoint to the
creepy atmosphere at the school, Amanda's thoughts about her
students, the bureaucracy of the school, the doltish principal and her
the customs of today's teens make for a hilarious counterpoint in
this excellent entry in the popular series.
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