Will Harper, a member of the NYPD bomb squad, lost part of a hand in an explosion at a city high school. While Harper is in Florida visiting his former partner, Jimmy Fahey, who works for a Tom Clancy^-like writer, a letter bomb arrives at the author's compound. The explosion kills Fahey and two colleagues. Loyalty to his dead partner prompts Harper to investigate; eventually, he connects the bombing to a series of seemingly unrelated incidents involving other celebrities. With the help of a reclusive former FBI profiler named Addleman, Harper finally homes in on a suspect but then must convince the authorities that the next victim may be a visiting British princess. Lutz is the award-winning author of the Fred Carver series, and August is a pseudonym for another well-known mystery writer. Together, they've created a pair of mismatched, very likable protagonists and placed them in a complex thriller with Unabomber overtones. Lutz always delivers the goods, and this is no exception.
Wes Lukowsky
From Kirkus Reviews
Looking for some relief from the omnipresent headlines about Theodore Kaczynski, Oklahoma City, and the World Trade Center plot? You won't find it in this Mad Bomber tale, which cleverly draws on all these stories and more. A couple of years after an amateurish package of gelignite disfigures his right hand and gets him pensioned off from the NYPD's bomb disposal unit, ex-Sgt. Will Harper drops in on Jimmy Fahey, the former acolyte who swapped the tension of disarming explosive devices--he was on the scene when Harper got blasted into retirement--for a cushy job running security ops for paranoid, successful thriller author Rod Buckner. Buckner's convinced against all reason that he needs state-of-the-art protection, but none of it protects him against a bomb that goes off just as Harper is leaving the neighborhood. A close shave for Harper--but Harold Addleman, whose alcoholism got him kicked off the FBI's Behavioral Sciences Unit, is convinced that it's much more besides: It's the work of a serial bomber with a taste for famous targets, like tennis player Tim Sothern and Congresswoman Susan Burton Wylie, and a truly scary ability to learn from his own mistakes. Working with Addleman, Harper painstakingly reconstructs a pattern of 22 deaths he can lay to the Celebrity Bomber, and predicts that the 23rd will be blowhard radio commentator Speed Rogers. But all his warnings aren't enough to get through to megalomaniac Rogers or his high-powered, clueless staff (a bit of partisan malice makes this episode especially stinging), and the bomber chalks up another victory and prepares for his climactic strike in Washington, D.C., home to more famous people than Harper, despite his newfound credibility, can possibly protect. The cat-and-mouse game is expertly routine. But veteran Lutz (Oops!, p. 22, etc.) and pseudonymous August shine in dramatizing the up-and-down power of Harper's own dubious celebrity, which makes him a target for a dozen agendas besides the bomber's. --
Copyright ©1998, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.