The Dark Tide
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- 8,49 €
Descrizione dell’editore
A breathtaking novel of suspense from the co-author with James Patterson of five No 1 bestsellers including Judge and Jury and Lifeguard, and the hit thriller of 2007, The Blue Zone
GET UP. KISS YOUR FAMILY GOODBYE. GOT TO WORK. DIE…
They say bad luck comes in threes. But for Karen Friedman’s family, bad luck is just the beginning.
It starts with her husband Charlie’s investments going wrong and the sudden death of a family pet. Then one morning Charlie takes the train to work – straight into a lethal terrorist blast. For his widow Karen and their children, all that remains of Charlie is a shared past.
Or is it? When the Friedmans begin to receive terrifying threats Karen turns to Detective Ty Hauck for help. Hauck’s family fell apart too, after a tragic accident he still blames himself for. Now he’s determined to keep Karen’s safe. But Hauck doesn’t know about how people who investigate Charlie have a way of ending up dead…
Reviews
Praise for The Blue Zone:
'”The Blue Zone” is a tense and chilling thriller with a whole lot of heart’ James Patterson
'Real fear, real thrills, real suspense…real good' Lee Child
'A spine-chilling mystery with a thrilling twist’ Cosmopolitan
‘A thriller with genuine feelgood factor’ The Times
About the author
Before turning to full-time writing, Andrew Gross was an executive in the sportswear business. Andrew has co-authored 5 novels with James Patterson, all of them reaching Number One in the NY Times Bestseller list. He currently lives in New York with his wife, Lynn and has three children. His first solo novel ‘The Blue Zone’ was a Top ten bestseller.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Gross, who's partnered with James Patterson on a number of bestsellers (Lifeguard, etc.), mixes murder, suspense, sex and romance as capably as his mentor in his assured second solo thriller (after The Blue Zone). Charles Friedman, a New York hedge fund trader, perishes in a bombing at Grand Central Station that destroys the railroad car in which he was riding one morning from his home in Greenwich, Conn. Ty Hauck, head of the Greenwich police's violent crime unit, enters the picture when a hit-and-run victim turns out to have a vague connection to Friedman. Soon, Friedman's widow and her kids are threatened by men searching for vast sums of money her late husband never earned. The stakes rise as Hauck's involvement shifts from professional to personal. While the reader will occasionally see the next drop, tunnel or curve looming far ahead, the roller-coaster thrills are still there in abundance.