Publishers Weekly
- Publisher's Weekly
Davis's sturdy, adrenaline-charged political techno-thriller sets a down-to-earth air force colonel against a deadly conspiracy involving formidable players in the White House and military. Medal of Honor-winner John Quinn is marking time at the Pentagon in a boring staff job, unhappy that injuries incurred in a mission over Iraq prevent him from flying again. Quinn is skeptical when his boss, scornful Major General Maxwell Cramer, suddenly gives him an auspicious assignment: heading the investigation of an air force Learjet crash in which the crew and the lone passenger, the president's half-brother, perished. Quinn picks outspoken fellow pilot Ted Chen--a highly competent but unpopular critic of the bureaucratic system--to assist him. Mistrust escalates when Quinn learns the White House has--against regulations--assigned Quinn's ambitious, opportunistic ex-wife, Jennifer Johnson, as a civilian observer on the case. Then Johnson is joined by the equally power-hungry White House Chief of Staff McKenzie, and soon the investigation is out of Quinn's control. Crafty Johnson leaks ugly rumors to the media, but before Quinn can unravel Johnson's involvement in the insider intrigue, other complications shed light on the situation. A female photography student who may have been a witness to the plane crash is missing; the daughter of an African-American former governor framed in a sex scandal raises questions about videotaped evidence of a murder coverup. Covert agents abound and bullets fly as Quinn and Chen fight for justice. Fast moving, atmospheric and authentically detailed, this gripping second novel (after The General) firmly establishes Davis--an ex-air force pilot with Pentagon experience--as a writer with a knack for white-knuckled suspense. (Aug.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.
Library Journal
Davis's first book, The General, sagged under the weight of its plot; this work, to the contrary, moves relentlessly forward. When a plane crash kills the President's brother, Col. John Quinn, head of the Air Force Safety Liaison Office, finds himself spearheading the difficult investigation--alongside his ex-wife. The investigation gets even more difficult as, predictably, almost everyone he approaches tries to keep the truth from him. Quinn is a reliable but poorly informed narrator, and Davis does a good job of keeping the reader guessing. Just when you think you have figured out whodunit and why, Davis tosses in a few more plot twists and turns. A satisfying, if unoriginal, story with engaging characters, this thriller is recommended--half-heartedly--for public libraries.--Patrick J. Wall, University City P.L., MO Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
By-the-numbers suspense about the crash of a military jet and the cover-up that follows. The ill-fated jet carried only a single passenger, but he had star quality. The death of Joshua Thurston, beloved brother of the President of the US, was obviously going to result in a major flap. Among the first to be jarred is youthful Colonel John Quinn, disconcerted, to say the least, on learning that he's in charge of the post-crash investigation. Why me? Quinn wonders. A brave and talented pilot until downed by an Iraqi missile, here's Quinn marking time but not really unhappy in his undemanding Pentagon job. Honcho an investigation in the midst of a media frenzy? Bad news. Flying's what he knew, not sleuthing. But, it occurs to him, that might be exactly the point. Suppose high-level people had something to hide? Wouldn't a certain amount of ineptitude be useful? Soon enough, Quinn, aided by his clever friend Ted Chen (a former cop), discovers that high-level people do, in fact, have all manner of secret agendas. The President's conniving chief of staff, for instance, has an acquisitive eye on the land's highest office. The glamourous but enigmatic First Lady had her own reasons to be seriously disenchanted with Joshua Thurston. Still, could anyone be vile enough to commit murder by sabotage? That is, flummox an airplane, sending two perfectly innocent men (the pilot and his co) to their deaths to protect iniquitous ends? You betcha. But despite political pressure, media pressure, attempts on their lives—and assorted suspense-novel dirty tricks—dreadnought good guys pursue malevolent bad guys until hides are nailed to the wall. As was true of The General (1998), Davis's failures inplotting stem from his failures in characterization. The lesson here is that exciting things don't happen to lackluster people.