Any thriller writer, wannabe or actual, would do well to study
Patterson's 10th Alex Cross novel. A sequel to last year's
The Big
Bad Wolf, the book is a model of economy, delivering a full package
of suspense, emotion and characterization in a minimum number of words.
The story brings back not only
Big Bad Wolf's arch-villain, the
Russian mobster known as the Wolf, but also an earlier Patterson bad
guy, the Weasel, recruited by the Wolf to further his plans. These
involve extorting Western powers for billions of dollars to avoid major
terrorist attacks on New York, London, Washington and Frankfurt—attacks
the Wolf offers a preview of by wiping out a town in Nevada by aerial
bombardment after hustling its citizens to safety, then by doing the
same to a village in England without evacuating the populace. The novel
features numerous exciting scenes, most notably one in which Cross is
kidnapped, then shackled to a suitcase atomic bomb. It's not the steady
tension, the numerous colorful locales, the reliable action climaxes nor
the novel's effective doomsday gloss that makes this thriller work so
well, though. It is, of course, the characters, and in Cross, Patterson
continues to elaborate his finest hero, cerebral yet emotional,
dedicated yet flawed, caught between duty and family. Regrettably, the
novel is marred in its final chapters by a series of surprises that
skirt playing unfair with the reader, but most Patterson fans probably
won't mind and they are legion enough to send this to the top of the
charts, for good reason.
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