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Some say it was Virginia and some say it was North Carolina but all agree it was a bar. Everyone was drinking domestic beer, except Reacher, who was drinking coffee, and inevitably after an hour the talk turned to guys people knew. Reacher sat quiet, not really part of the group, content to ignore the war stories and the tall tales, until the name Nick Heller came up. Someone said Heller had been one of General Hood's boys, and was therefore suspect, because everyone knew Hood was as bent as a nine dollar bill. Reacher shook his head and spoke for the first time in an hour.
"No," he said. "Heller worked for Hood, but he was never one of the boys. In fact the smart money said Heller was the guy who would take Hood down one day."
"You know Heller?" someone asked.
"No," Reacher said again. "But I met a guy who knows a guy who knows a guy. And I heard things."
"And?"
"I made a mental note, that's all. Heller's OK."
"As good as us?"
"Better."
"Than you too?"
Reacher smiled. "He's in the rear view mirror. A little closer than some.""What's he like?"
"He drives a Land Rover. A thing called a Defender. British. Like a Willys jeep without the frills. That's about all you need to know, right there."
"So he's a caveman, like you."
"No, that's where it gets complicated. He's very smart with technology. I heard he did a couple of years in D.C. with one of those hi-tech Beltway firms. Like the CIA, but private. Better paid. And more efficient, obviously."
"I heard he's in Boston," someone said.
Reacher nodded."There was an issue."
"What kind?"
"Ethical, probably. Heller's got a backbone. Guys like that have problems in D.C."
"His dad was a crook."
"Financial," Reacher said.
"They're all crooks. But Heller's OK."
"Would you trust him? You?"
"Probably," Reacher said. "He's a stand-up guy. Apparently he went to bat for his brother a year or so ago. No reason to, but he did. It was a bad situation, too. But he came out ahead. Some very nice moves. There's a nephew, they say. Weird kid, but Heller does his best. And his mother is still on the scene. Someone once told me a guy who gets along with his mother can't be all bad."
"Who told you that?"
"My mother."
"What's he doing in Boston? Private eye?"
"Not exactly," Reacher said. "More like a private spy. He put together a crew up there. They do the CIA stuff in the office, and then he goes and does the black ops stuff himself. One stop shopping."
"Is he a Red Sox fan?"
"I hope not."
"Still, Boston. Quiet up there."
"Not very," Reacher said. "Guy I met was talking about a kidnapping. Some rich girl taken out of a night club. Billionaire father, and so on and so forth. Some serious Russians involved. I mean, serious as lung cancer. But it turned out OK."
"That was Heller?"
"Lips are sealed, but I don't see who else it could have been. It was done about ninety percent the same way I would have done it. Which means it had to be Heller. There's no one else that good up there."
"You've got competition," someone said.
Reacher smiled again."Human nature," he said. "There are always new guys. Law of averages says some of them will be good."
"Would you call him? If you were in trouble in Boston?"
"I don't have a phone," Reacher said.
"But I'd be happy enough if he happened to show up. We could do some damage together, that's for damn sure."
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.“Listeners, be advised: Once you push "PLAY" on this second Nick Heller thriller, pushing "STOP" will be extremely difficult...From the opening paragraphs, Holter Graham's cool, acerbic performance personifies the sardonic Heller, ‘private spy.’ Graham's convincing delivery expands to include characters as varied as a terrified teen heiress, a pompous senator, and a gold-digging call girl. A highlight is his portrayal of a Russian psychopath. As the action intensifies, Graham's mastery of pacing becomes evident as he moves the listener along briskly without sounding rushed. One certainly hopes to hear more Heller adventures from Finder and Graham.” – AudioFile Magazine
“Holter Graham is a prolific, professional, and extremely reliable narrator of audio books…His Nick is smart, cagey, but too impulsive. Graham has a knack from capturing each voice from Alexa’s querulous teen notes to Marshall’s sorrowful and manipulative pleas. Together, Finder and Graham have created a thoroughly engaging summer listen.” – Reviewing the Evidence
“Holter Graham’s outstanding narration enhanced the characterizations and added depth to the author’s work, while making each speak (both male and female) distinct and immediately identifiable. I highly recommend listening to this one!” – Book Loons
“The novel is as tension-packed and tricky as any Finder fan might expect and Graham’s pacing perfectly mirrors its increasing suspense as time and Alexa’s air supply start to run out. This is one of those parked car audiobooks, the kind that keep you sitting in the driveway with the engine running just to hear what happens next.” – Mystery Scene
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
80 of 88 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Five-Star Disappointment?,
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This review is from: Buried Secrets (Nick Heller) (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
I'm not kidding about my title: I was disappointed in this book even though it was one of the most riveting thrillers I've ever read, and certainly Joseph Finder's best book to date. The reason for my disappointment is that even though the plot was terrific, there were scores of terrific twists and action scenes, and the characters were fascinating and compelling, this book could not escape its one fatal flaw.
It ended. I wasn't ready for this to end. I wanted it to keep going. I wanted to find out more about the main character, Nick Heller. This is the 2nd outing with Heller as the main character, and frankly it's not nearly enough. The back story on this guy seems like it could fill quite a few books more, and I want to find out all there is to know. With short chapters, snappy dialogue, and a breakneck pace that is going to leave all other thrillers in the dust, this book is well worth reading.
25 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
No Secret Here -- Finder Has Written a Gripping Thriller,
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This review is from: Buried Secrets (Nick Heller) (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
There's a special joy that comes from watching a master at the top of his game. Kasparov sitting over a chessboard. Heifetz playing the violin. LeBron winning a champion--well, scratch that last one. But you can add to the list the pleasure of reading a thriller written by Joseph Finder. Finder's been at this game for a long time now and he knows what he's doing in a way that most authors simply can't match, a fact he demonstrates yet again with BURIED SECRETS.
BURIED SECRETS features the return of Nick Heller, the "private spy" introduced in the outstanding VANISHED. Heller is a former Black Ops agent who now plies his trade in the private sector, utilizing his extensive skills, smarts and contacts to work the shadowy world where corporate, military and intelligence interests meet. As the story opens, a young woman is out partying with her friends in a hip Boston nightclub. She meets a guy -- the wrong guy, of course -- and goes home with him, mostly against her will. When she wakes from her drug-induced stupor, she finds herself the victim of a horrific kidnapping. It turns out that the girl's father is one of Heller's oldest friends, a billionaire hedge fund manager who'll do anything to get his daughter back. Or will he? The more Heller investigates the case, the more secrets he uncovers, and the further away he keeps finding himself from the truth. BURIED SECRETS is a perfect example of a white-knuckle thriller: suspenseful and exciting, with good action scenes, interesting characters and lots of smart technical details and inside info that take the reader behind the curtain to catch a glimpse of the shadows. There are few writers working today who could pull off a book like this with such skill and panache -- and none who could do it while making it all look so effortless. BURIED SECRETS cements Finder's status as the master of the modern thriller.
25 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Second Entry of the Heller Series; Well Done!,
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This review is from: Buried Secrets (Nick Heller) (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Always-reliable Joseph Finder brings us the second entry in the series featuring Nick Heller, who was introduced in Vanished. Heller's a former Army "operator" with a background in secret high-level special ops. Heller has returned to his home town of Boston and gone "private" after the events in the previous book, but he hasn't lost his edge or his contacts. When a long-standing family friend hires Nick to find his kidnapped daughter, Nick has to use his old contacts, new friends, and all his training and toughness to unravel a tangled ball of subterfuge, blackmail, and international intrigue in order to try to rescue the innocent teenager who's in the hands of a psychotic killer intent on realizing his own twisted agenda. Tightly plotted and fast-paced, the story's full of twists and turns, and kept this reader glued to the pages right up to the final exciting showdown. Heller's a terrific character; a man of honor with a sense of humor and the hard knuckles and gun skills to see things through to the end. In many ways these books remind me of the Bob Lee Swagger novels by Stephen Hunter. If you like those, you're sure to like the Heller books, too. 4.5 stars, rounded up.
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