Book - The Pawn
Thursday, 14 April 2011 10:00
The PawnSteven James
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In this riveting thriller, the first of a planned trilogy, James (Story) introduces FBI agent Patrick Bowers. His professional specialty is environmental criminology, which attempts to track lawbreakers by analyzing the significance of the time and place at which the crime occurred. When corpses of young women start turning up near Asheville, N.C., Bowers is called in. The killer's MO is to tie a yellow ribbon in his victims' hair and leave a chess piece somewhere on the scene. Bowers begins to suspect that the governor of North Carolina, rumored to be the next Republican presidential contender, is somehow connected to the murders, and that a cult with links to Jonestown might also be involved. Making matters trickier, the special agent supervising Bowers turns out to be a longtime colleague with whom Bowers has some bad blood. Bowers, a recent widower with a surly teenage stepdaughter to raise, tries to keep his grief and parental confusion at bay so that he can focus on the case as the killer targets more innocent women. Christian faith makes a subtle appearance in the story and appears to be a theme that will be developed in future installments. A gripping plot and brisk pacing will win James some fans eager for his next offering. (Sept.)
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I bought this Kindle book a while ago but only decided to read it recently (bad, bad decision. Should have read it right after I bought it!) I was originally a little wary of thie crime/mystery factor (I had a not-so-pleasant experience with another book previously) but it turned out that I liked this very much. There were some cliches, yes, but well, overall it was a really good read.
A few points which I really doubt, though, are... well, obviously, Patrick is still mourning for his wife's death... and he is already checking out other ladies? I don't know, this might be a normal thing out there, but the secret romantic in me was, well, disgusted by that.
The antagonists were nicely done, very believable. The issue I had with the previous crime/mystery/thriller book I read was that I felt the antagonist was too "oily"... whatever it means (the word just came up as I wrote this).
I'll probably follow through the rest of the series, but the first assignment on hand is read all the books I have first.
