Skip to main content
Thick as Thieves by Sandra Brown
The Revelators by Ace Atkins
The First to Lie by Hank Phillipi Ryan
Then She Vanished by T. Jefferson Parker
Every Kind of Wicked by Lisa Black
Hellfire by John Gilstrap
The Second Mother by Jenny Milchman
Fractus Europa: Stories by Eric C. Anderson and Adam Dunn
 by
 by
 by
Thick as Thieves by Sandra Brown

Thick as Thieves by Sandra Brown

One of the best things about the dog days of August is the annual release of the latest from Sandra Brown. This summer’s offering is the bold and bracing, hardboiled crime thriller Thick as Thieves (Grand Central), perhaps her most ambitious and best-realized effort ever.

The book opens, as many crime novels do, with a flashback to a heist gone bad. In the present, the youngest of the ill-fated crew, Ledge Burnet, returns to Caddo Lake, TX, ready to bury the past once and for all. But the past continues to tug at him in the form of classic femme fatale Aden Maxell, who knows where the bodies are buried and is determined to add more to the pile. She seeks to make Ledge a party to what she’s planning and he appears to be putty in her hands, even as he seeks his own dark redemption.

Brown had long made the transition from romantic suspense to hardcore thriller writer seem effortless. But she reaches the heights of masters like Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett in Thick as Thieves, spinning a tale steeped in noir and nuance that’s utterly riveting from the first page to the last.


The Revelators by Ace Atkins

The Revelators by Ace Atkins

Speaking of great crime thrillers, Ace Atkins is one of those writers consistently setting the bar for everyone else, the reasons for which are all front and center in The Revelators (Putnam).

In his tenth outing, Atkins’ seminal ex-Army Ranger Quinn Colson is once again cast in the role of savior against a cadre of colorfully roguish figures determined to skirt the law at all costs. This time out, his antagonist is Fannie Hathcock, an old-school crime boss whose power is both undisputed and unchallenged. That is, until Colson assembles an Untouchables-like team to fight Hathcock on her own terms.

Atkins seems to be channeling a combination of Greg Isles and John Hart, two other writers adept at shrouding sleepy Southern noir in blood. The difference is that neither of those two, nor hardly any author for that matter, is capable of weaving such a complex web of competing narratives that coalesce to form a masterpiece of both form and function.


The First to Lie by Hank Phillipi Ryan

The First to Lie by Hank Phillipi Ryan

Hank Phillipi Ryan’s scintillating and superb The First to Lie (Forge) is as much a morality tale as thriller.

That’s because this standalone by the much-lauded investigative journalist from Boston’s WHDH-TV presents us with the depraved depths people will sink to get what they want. The book features the rotating perspectives of characters battling themselves and each other in the form of Nora Quinn, Ellie Berenson and Meg West. A sinister pharmaceutical concern is the common denominator between them, along with the lies and deceit they all resort to in a classic take on the old adage that everything is, indeed, relative.

The First to Lie is a splendid piece of postmodern noir in which the darkness rests in the souls of both the aggrieved and their aggrievers. This is crime writing at its level best, challenging the traditional notions of heroism as well as structure. (Read the Tall Poppy review of this title here, and watch the BookTrib interview with the author here.)

Amazon


Then She Vanished by T. Jefferson Parker

Then She Vanished by T. Jefferson Parker

Barnes & Noble


Every Kind of Wicked by Lisa Black

Every Kind of Wicked by Lisa Black

IndieBound


Hellfire by John Gilstrap

Hellfire by John Gilstrap

Bookshop


The Second Mother by Jenny Milchman

The Second Mother by Jenny Milchman

Speaking of noir, this must be the month for it, since T. Jefferson Parker’s typically terrific Then She Vanished (Putnam) is shaded in murky tones and populated by characters of questionable ethics at best.

The only one whose ethics remain unquestioned is private detective and former Marine Roland Ford, back for his fourth go-round in this San Diego-based mystery series. Even that city’s brilliant sunshine has trouble piercing the darkness of what he’s facing this time out in the form of politico Dalton Strait whose wife has disappeared. This as the city is roiled by a series of bombings and as unrest laid partially at Strait’s feet bubbles over into violence. Ford, of course, is no stranger to that, though taking on a group committed to chaos at all costs was not what he bargained for when he took the case.

The three-time Edgar Award-winning Parker’s lyrical language shines here as the light emanating through the darkness, helping to make Then She Vanished as great a novel as it is a mystery thriller. The kind of book you savor like a fine wine to the very last sip.


Fractus Europa: Stories by Eric C. Anderson and Adam Dunn

Fractus Europa: Stories by Eric C. Anderson and Adam Dunn

The perfectly titled Every Kind of Wicked (Kensington) by Lisa Black features one of the best pairings crime fiction has to offer in forensic expert Maggie Gardner (modeled after Black herself) and detective Jack Renner.

This time out, the stalwart duo find themselves following a trail that starts with the discovery of a body in a graveyard (I told you this was the month for noir!) and leads them to dirty dealings in medicine thanks to some shady financial doings. Money, in books like this, seems to be at the root of all evil, although the fun in Black’s latest is watching Maggie’s ex-husband battling Renner for her soul as much as her heart, that is, until one of them becomes a murder suspect himself.

Secrets abound in this stellar crime effort set in a revitalized Cleveland that reveals that you can’t hide depravity behind a fresh coat of paint. Every Kind of Wicked is as masterfully constructed as it is beautifully realized. Not to be missed.


 by

John Gilstrap shows once again why he is considered one of today’s top action-thriller writers in Hellfire (Kensington).

His latest to feature hostage rescue specialist Jonathan Graves takes a decidedly personal turn when Graves finds himself on the trail of two kidnapped boys he took responsibility for when they had no one else. Turns out it’s an especially nasty, and desperate, Mexican cartel that’s behind the snatching of the boys. But that cartel only makes for one faction of bad guys Graves must deal with if he’s going to recover the kids.

In Hellfire Gilstrap proves himself to have a light, deft hand from an emotional standpoint, the same hand wielding a hammer for the action he’s known for. After a dozen books featuring his seminal hero, he continues to get better and so does Graves himself.


 by

Jenny Milchman commands the page the way the best actors command the stage in The Second Mother (Sourcebooks).

The book’s hero, Julie Weathers, just wanted to get a fresh start by moving to the isolated Mercy Island off the coast of Maine where she’s taken the job as teacher to the local children. All seems well, until — in a fashion befitting Ira Levin’s The Stepford Wives or Thomas Tyron’s The Other — Julie’s new life begins to unravel as she realizes the terrifying truth behind the locals’ insular world.

Milchman brings the suspense from a simmer to a slow boil, as The Second Mother becomes an agonizing exercise in escape and survival. This is the kind of book Alfred Hitchcock would have loved to adapt into a film, and for good reason.


 by

Count me among those who love to dabble in anthologies from time to time, for the immediate gratification their stories offer. With that in mind, I found Fractus Europa: Stories (Dunn Books) to be among the most prescient and thought-provoking collections I’ve ever encountered. 

Edited by Eric C. Anderson and Adam Dunn, the European-centric stories are all set in a near future raked by social and economic strife beyond even what the headlines bring us every morning today. I’d never heard of a single one of the contributors before, and after reading their stories, I was left wondering why. A sampling of the subjects includes American-Russian frayed relations, Brexit, health care, Ukraine and plenty more of tomorrow’s headlines.

Those potential headlines, it turns out, make great fodder for these thinking man’s/woman’s tales that might not make the next Twilight Zone reboot, but stand on their own as beautifully drawn landscapes upon a global geopolitical canvas. (Read BookTrib’s review here.)

 


Jon Land

Jon Land is the bestselling author over 25 novels. He graduated from Brown University in 1979 Phi Beta Kappa and Magna cum Laude and continues his association with Brown as an alumni advisor. Jon often bases his novels and scripts on extensive travel and research as well as a twenty-five year career in martial arts. He is an associate member of the US Special Forces and frequently volunteers in schools to help young people learn to enjoy the process of writing. Jon is the Vice-President of marketing of the International Thriller Writers (ITW) and is often asked to speak on topics regarding writing and research. In addition to writing suspense/thrillers, Jon is also a screenwriter with his first film credit in 2005. Jon works with many industry professionals and has garnered the respect and friendship of many author-colleagues. He loves storytelling in all its forms. Jon currently lives in Providence, Rhode Island and loves hearing from his readers and aspiring writers.

Leave a Reply