From Barnes & Noble
Renegade FBI agent Mark Beamon (Rising Phoenix, Storming Heaven) makes his third rip-roaring appearance in Kyle Mills's Free Fall. A man is mutilated, a top-secret file that some will kill to bury is missing, and the young female rock climber who has the answers is loose in Wyoming's jagged hills.
Stephen Coonts
You'll need a seat belt when you read this one. Mills is a writer with a brilliant future.
Stephen Coonts
You'll need a seat belt when you read this one. Mills is a writer with a brilliant future.
Tom Clancy
Kyle Mills is a writer to watch.
Publishers Weekly
The race is on when a law school dropout unearths an explosive FBI file that catalogues the tawdry indiscretions of several leading politicians, including the Republican presidential nominee. Soon the student's mutilated body is found in the van of his ex-girlfriend, a world-class rock climber. As suspicion is thrown on the elusive girl, Mark Beamon, a suspended FBI agent whose career is hanging by a thread, is brought in by an anonymous party to track her down. Also in pursuit is third-party presidential candidate David Hallorin, a megalomaniac whose pockets are as deep as his determination to achieve his own political ends. Actor Shea defines the individual characters well, from nasal underlings to booming politicians to classically sardonic agents. The abridgement causes some unpolished transitions, and listeners may be surprised to find characters extricated from dicey situations with a flip of the tape, but mostly they will enjoy this quality production of a classy and well-plotted political thriller. Based on the HarperCollins hardcover (Forecasts, Mar. 6). (Apr.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|
Library Journal
In Mills's third political thriller featuring FBI agent Mark Beamon, the presidential campaign season is complicating Mark's life in more ways than he knows. Because of the leak of incriminating tapes Mark found, politicians on all sides are out for his blood. Faced with a legal battle that he can't afford, Mark reluctantly agrees to an offer of $300,000 to find mountain climber Darby Moore, whose ex-boyfriend was found brutally murdered. A suspect in his death who finds herself in possession of an FBI file that incriminates one of the three presidential candidates, Darby goes into hiding. Mark knows that any of the three would kill to gain possession of the file. The suspense generated by the hunt and the political battle is immense. Unlike many other authors, Mills has not fallen into the trap of writing a story that is only suited for a movie screen; there are no cookie-cutter characters or inexplicable action scenes. Instead, Mills, like David Baldacci, knows that a great story comes first (and then, one hopes, a great movie). Recommended for all collections.--Jane Jorgenson, Madison P.L., WI Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.\