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Summary
Summary
New York Times bestselling author.
Nick Heller is tough, smart, and stubborn. And in his line of work, those traits are essential. Trained in the Special Forces, Nick is an intelligence investigator - his job: to expose secrets powerful people would rather keep hidden. He's also the man to call when you need a problem fixed. Desperate, Nick's nephew Gabe, calls Nick. Gabe's mother, Lauren, has been attacked and lies in a coma, and his stepfather Roger, Nick's brother, has vanished without a trace.
Nick and Roger have been on the outs since their father, the "fugitive financier" went to jail, and Roger followed in his father's footsteps. Now Nick's search for his brother puts him on a collision course with one of the most powerful corporations in the world - and it will protect its secrets at any cost.
"Cliffhangers galore, the fascinating tradecraft of corporate espionage, and an engrossing story will propel readers through this outstanding thriller. Highly recommended as a great summer read." - Library Journal (Starred Review)
Author Notes
Joseph Finder was born in Chicago, Illinois on October 6, 1958, and spent his early childhood in Afghanistan and the Philippines. He received a B.A. in Russian studies from Yale University and a M.A. at the Harvard Russian Research Center. He also served as a teaching fellow at Harvard from 1983-84.
His first book, Red Carpet: The Connection between the Kremlin and America's Most Powerful Businessmen, was published in 1983 and is a nonfiction account of Western capitalists making profits from trade with the communist world. His first novel, The Moscow Club, was published in 1991. His other novels include Extraordinary Powers, The Zero Hour, Paranoia, Power Play, and the Nick Heller series. Company Man won a the Barry and Gumshoe Awards for Best Thriller and Killer Instinct won the International Thriller Writers Award for Best Novel. High Crimes was adapted into a 2002 Fox film starring Ashley Judd and Morgan Freeman.
Finder's novel, The Fixer, made The New York Times best seller list in 2015.
In addition to fiction, he writes on espionage and international relations for the New York Times, The Washington Post, and The New Republic.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (3)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Known for his stand-alones, bestseller Finder (Power Play) introduces Nick Heller, an elite corporate intelligence specialist and former Special Services badass, in this exciting series opener. After a frantic call from his 14-year-old nephew, Gabe, Heller returns home to Washington, D.C., from a job in California to find Gabe's mother in a coma and Gabe's stepfather, Roger, who is Heller's older brother, vanished without a trace. Though the brothers have been estranged since their father's much-publicized securities fraud conviction years earlier, Nick vows to protect Gabe and his mother and unravel the mystery of Roger's alleged abduction. The investigation leads him to some disturbing revelations about Roger, not the least of which involves a powerful-and dangerous-private military company. Written in staccato chapters that are emotionally supercharged and action packed, this thriller will more than satisfy adrenaline junkies and have them guessing until the very end. (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Booklist Review
Finder's latest thriller boasts the same breakneck pace and labyrinthine schemes that have made his previous business stories blockbusters. But this time the plot is centered on a domestic drama one man's outsize greed puts his family in peril. Hero Nick Heller fits the cookie-cutter model of Finder protagonists. He is an international investigator with a corporate-espionage agency. The first time we meet Heller, he is inside a cargo airplane hanger in L.A., neatly solving the theft of a billion American dollars intended to support the Iraq War. The ingenious way he locates the cargo nicely establishes his ability to find just about anything. The next phone call he receives, from his teenage nephew, Gabe, calls on this ability. Gabe's stepfather (Nick's estranged brother) has been kidnapped near a posh D.C. sushi joint. Gabe's mother was struck from behind and is fighting for her life in a hospital. Heller, despite his disapproval of his craven brother, who took the low road into corporate finance (it's getting easier and easier to make corporate types villains), accepts the case for his nephew's sake. Finder's conventional mystery lacks the frisson of his purely corporate thrillers, though we do see glimpses of that world from time to time, and his hero's methods sometimes seem like taking an AK-47 to a bumblebee, but there's enough plot tension to keep readers involved.--Fletcher, Connie Copyright 2009 Booklist
Library Journal Review
Few recent thrillers have as many heart-skipping moments and as rousing a climax as Finder's (www.josephfinder.com) follow-up to Power Play (2007), also available from BBC Audiobooks America. When Special Forces-trained investigator Nick Heller's estranged brother, Roger, is kidnapped, Nick must face off against some of Washington's most powerful forces to find him. Narrator Holter Graham (www.holtergraham.com) puts his significant acting skills to work, especially in his voicing of the truly unique protagonist. The suspense never falters, and listeners will be pleased by the satisfying ending to this complex tale. [Includes a bonus interview with the author; the St. Martin's hc, published in August, was a New York Times best seller.-Ed.]-Joseph L. Carlson, Vandenberg Air Force Base Lib., Lompoc, CA (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.