We Can't Save You
A Tale of Politics, Murder, and Maine
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- USD 18.99
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- USD 18.99
Descripción editorial
Thomas E. Ricks, author of five New York Times bestsellers, combines his deep knowledge of Maine with his years of experience covering U.S. military operations to craft a powerful tale of politics and mayhem in this riveting crime novel.
When a group of young Native Americans launches a series of protests against climate change and its effects on the waters and woods of Maine, veteran FBI agent Ryan Tapia, is assigned to monitor the movement. The protestors, who become determined to split away from American society, are led by “Peeled Paul” Soco, an Malpense hermit who played a key role in one of Tapia's previous investigations. When the marchers begin making camps on the lawns of luxurious summer mansions along the Maine coast, they win national media attention—and the wrath of a reactionary president.
Tapia soon finds himself torn. He wants to do right by Soco and the protestors, but his bosses at the Bureau are eager to please a president itching to crack down on them. Growing increasingly sympathetic to the protestors and their cause, he tells them about a possible refuge—a secret CIA base hidden away in the depths of the Maine woods on the Canadian border.
Enraged by the protestor's actions, the White House sends a U.S. Army unit to track down the protestors on their stealth march through the evergreen forests. Meanwhile, Tapia’s bosses, vexed and embarrassed, fire him and threaten arrest. Undaunted, Tapia snowmobiles through the wilderness on a wintry night to warn the Indian protestors of the impending attack.
Building to a dizzying, wind-whipped climax, We Can't Save You establishes Ryan Tapia as one of the most compelling and nuanced investigators in crime fiction.
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Ryan Tapia gets entangled with a protest movement in Ricks's so-so second thriller featuring the Maine FBI agent (after Everyone Knows but You). Ryan's lover, Solidarity Harrison, harbors ambitions to be Maine's next governor, but her advisers warn her that a romance with a federal agent is an electoral liability, leading her to end their relationship. A brokenhearted Ryan gets a second blow when he learns that his new supervisor is the Bureau's most notorious screwup. As he adjusts to both changes, Ryan looks into a bizarre murder case: a corpse has been dumped in the Gulf of Maine with a yellow wig nailed to its skull. Agents suspect the crime's connected to a Native American–led climate change protest movement, which has elicited a hostile response from the U.S. president and is poised to play a major role in Maine's upcoming elections. As Ryan digs deeper into the murder, he grows increasingly sympathetic to the protestors' cause, leading him to a crisis of conscience as the government tries to quash the movement. While Ricks nimbly weaves together elements of political thriller, whodunit, and domestic drama, his characterizations are disappointingly generic. This fails to leave a mark.