India and China in Africa: A Comparative Perspective of the Oil Industry
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With their phenomenal growth rates, India and China are surging ahead as world economic powers. Due...
Commitment and Cooperation on High Courts: A Cross-Country Examination of Institutional Constraints on Judges
Andrew J. Green and Benjamin Alarie
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Judicial decision-making may ideally be impartial, but in reality it is influenced by many different...
Copyright and E-Learning: A Guide for Practitioners
Chris Morrison and Jane Secker
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Jane Secker and Chris Morrison have completely revised and updated this highly successful text to...
The New Contented Little Baby Book: The Secret to Calm and Confident Parenting
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The Contented Little Baby Book, based on Gina Ford's personal experience of caring for over 300...
WorldStock - Global Stock Market Tracking App
Finance and Business
App
“WorldStock” provides a summary of global markets performance. At a glance you can see what's...
WorldStock for iPad
Finance and Business
App
“WorldStock” provides a summary of global markets performance. At a glance you can see what's...
Ross (3284 KP) rated Tell Me Lies in Books
Jan 28, 2020
Ed James' new series takes place in Seattle rather than the UK-based series he has penned to date. There is also a change in subject, focusing on child abductions rather than the standard "murrdurr" fayre.
Special Agent Max Carter is tasked with tracking down a senator's abducted children. With the clock ticking, we see the action from the abductor's PoV as well as Carter's and the father's. The senator finds himself trying to help the abductor of his children to uncover a government conspiracy in which he may have been involved. The mix of different perspectives allows the story to flow with a good pace, with different angles of the emerging story adding up for the reader in way they wouldn't yet do for the characters. In the middle of the book the investigation did start to feel a little samey (both the FBI agents and the abductor/senator teams going through the same leads one after the other), but this didn't last long.
The change in location sadly comes with a change in writing style and this was a downside for me. I like James' flowing narrative and the American tone and style were quite jarring. I would say more American than genuine American authors. However once I accepted this it did not spoil my enjoyment of the book as a whole.
The ending of the story was mostly satisfying but with some loose ends that I hope to see addressed in subsequent books.
A departure for James' readers but worth the trip, and a good book for fans of Harlan Coben and David Baldacci.
Essentials of Tourism
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How has a family-run hotel in Jamaica become one of the leading sustainable tourism projects in the...
Learning in Later Life: Challenges for Social Work and Social Care
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Within the UK and Europe, government legislation and policies concerned with demography have...
The Barbastelle Bat Conservation Handbook
Chris Packham, Ian Davidson-Watts and Matt Zeale
Book
The Barbastelle Bat Conservation Handbook is a long-awaited guide to barbastelle bat ecology,...