From Publishers Weekly
Bodman, a former Reagan deputy press secretary and NSC senior director, makes little use of her inside knowledge of Washington, D.C., in her second near-future political thriller to feature computer whiz Cameron Cammy Talbot. Scant months after Talbot managed to avert a war between India and Pakistan by deploying a technology she invented in
Checkmate (2007), the White House taps her to develop an antimissile device to restore public confidence in plane travel after a series of midair explosions aboard commercial aircraft. Meanwhile, the attractive scientist's former lover, Lt. Col. Hunt Daniels, and the widowed vice president, Jayson Keller, are both pursuing Talbot. The book's romantic scenes bring the action to a screeching halt. The forces behind the air disasters make several amateurish attempts on Cammy's life, but she predictably survives to save the day. Romantic suspense readers will be more rewarded than Tom Clancy fans.
(Feb.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
Bodman’s third novel is a mixed bag. Samantha Reid works for Homeland Security, and when several natural-gas pipelines explode under mysterious circumstances, she and her colleagues think terrorism. The vice president of the gas company, Tripp Adams, assists her in trying to decipher who is behind the sabotage. Of course, the two of them went to the same college and longed for each other from afar. The premise is strong and Bodman’s background as a White House staffer provides rich detail, but the reader must dig a bit through too much eye-rollingly stilted dialogue and sappy passages straight out of the worst romance novels. Avoid the mush. --Jeff Ayers
--This text refers to the
Mass Market Paperback
edition.
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