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Jericho's Fall (Vintage) [Paperback]

Stephen L. Carter (Author)
2.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (75 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Vintage June 1, 2010
A riveting spy thriller, Jericho's Fall is the spellbinding story of a young woman running for her life from shadowy government forces.
 
In a secluded mountain retreat, Jericho Ainsley, former CIA director and former secretary of defense, is dying of cancer. To his bedside he has called Rebecca DeForde, a young, single mother, who was once his lover. Instead of simply bidding farewell, however, Ainsley imparts an explosive secret and DeForde finds herself thrown into a world of international intrigue, involving ex-CIA executives, local police, private investigators, and even a US senator. With no one to trust, DeForde is suddenly on the run, relying on her own wits and the lessons she learned from Ainsley to stay alive.  
 

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Editorial Reviews

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Book Description
Stephen L. Carter’s brilliant debut, The Emperor of Ocean Park, spent eleven week son the New York Times best-seller list. Now, in Jericho’s Fall, Carter turns his formidable talents to the shadowy world of spies, official secrecy, and financial fraud in a thriller that rivets the reader’s attention until the very last page.

In an imposing house in the Colorado Rockies, Jericho Ainsley, former head of the Central Intelligence Agency and a Wall Street titan, lies dying. He summons to his beside Beck DeForde, the younger woman for whom he threw away his career years ago, miring them both in scandal. Beck believes she is visiting to say farewell. Instead, she is drawn into a battle over an explosive secret that foreign governments and powerful corporations alike want to wrest from Jericho before he dies.

An intricate and timely thriller that plumbs the emotional depths of a failed love affair and a family torn apart by mistrust, Jericho’s Fall takes us on a fast-moving journey through the secretive world of intelligence operations and the meltdown of the financial markets. And it creates, in Beck DeForde, an unforgettable heroine for our turbulent age.

A Q&A with Stephen L. Carter


Question: Jericho's Fall is a departure from your previous novels. What made you decide to turn your attention to a spy thriller?
Stephen L. Carter: I was ready for a change of pace.  My other novels have been large—as the reviewers like to say, multi-layered.  I wanted to try a short, straightforward page turner, a book to be read for the sheer pleasure of the story.  Thrillers are fun to read, and, as I discovered, they are also lots of fun to write.  If readers like Jericho's Fall, I expect I will write more of them.

Question: In your "Author's Note" you write that "the problem of mental illness among intelligence professionals is often said to be endemic." This link between intelligence work and madness is certainly born out in your character Jericho Ainsley.  Why do you think this link exists and is this what drew you to Jericho's story?
Stephen L. Carter: In researching my previous novel, Palace Council, I became fascinated by the problem of mental illness in the intelligence community, an issue much-commented on in the 1960s and 1970s, mainly because of James Jesus Angleton, whose paranoia when he ran counter-intelligence at the CIA nearly tore the place apart. I thought that structuring a story around an ex-spy who was losing his mind might provide a nice hook, and the rest just followed.

Question: Jericho is former Director of the CIA, former Secretary of Defense, former White House National Security Advisor ("former everything" as you refer to him). You seem equally interested in how his career affected not only him but his family and in particular his ex-lover Rebecca DeForde ("Beck"). Why did you decide to make Beck the center of the story?
Stephen L. Carter: My first novel, The Emperor of Ocean Park, dealt in part with what happens to the family of a man who is embittered after losing a tough confirmation battle for the Supreme Court.  Here, I thought about the men in public life who have been brought down (or nearly brought down) by their relationships with women. We always find out what happened to the men, but rarely what happened to the women.  In Beck DeForde, I wrote a character who was once "the other woman" to a famous man, and has had to rebuild her life after their tempestuous relationship ended.  The idea of drawing her into the conspiratorial web surrounding her ex-lover was irresistible.

Question: Have you always been fascinated with the idea of spies and secrets?
Stephen L. Carter: It is not spying itself that interests me, it is the people who do it. I have done some reading about the toll that intelligence work takes on families, and here I have tried to imagine it fictionally.

As to secrets, I teach a course at Yale Law School on secrets and the law. We build powerful walls to keep secrets, and most of them are probably not worth keeping. Those that are, sooner or later tend to leak through the wall. No doubt there are some secrets that should be kept, but classification and national security tempt those in power to keep in the darkness acts and words that should be dragged into the light. One rule of thumb I wish all officials would follow is this: Don't do anything you're not willing to defend in your memoirs.

Question: What sort of research did this novel require?  Did you have to investigate the history of the CIA? What it's like to work in the intelligence community? Interrogation techniques? Did your research into the intelligence community unearth any surprises?
Stephen L. Carter: I did a lot of research about the CIA, its history, its structure, its personalities, as well as about various mental illnesses.  One thing that struck me was how much mental illness there has been, historically, near the top of the Agency. I mentioned Angleton. Frank Wisner, the father of the clandestine services, had a nervous breakdown while on the job. There are other, smaller stories, as well.

Question: After his retirement, Jericho went to work for a big financial firm where he may have been using his former ties and connections to perpetrate a massive financial fraud. While you are clear to point out that this is fiction it does seem that many government big wigs transition to the financial sector. Should we be troubled about this tendency? Have there been financial scandals involving former CIA agents?
Stephen L. Carter: The CIA has had its share of financial scandals, but the larger problem, I think, is the way that people parlay government service into multi-million dollar stints lobbying and litigating against the very agencies they used to run. Such conduct is not, nor should it be, illegal;  but it does not look good either.

Question:
Can people who dedicate their lives to keeping secrets and trading in conspiracies, ever really retire from that kind of work?
Stephen L. Carter: Of course one can retire, but this line of work has to have a lasting effect. If you live your life not talking about your work, it can be difficult to settle into a life where you can talk about everything. And people who have been on the inside often suffer when forced to sit on the outside instead.

Question: Jericho's Fall is set mainly in a small town in the Colorado Rockies. How and why did you choose this particular setting for the novel?
Stephen L. Carter: I have spent a lot of time in the Colorado Rockies over the past thirty years, and it is a region of the country I dearly love. There are, moreover, many places in the mountains where cell phone service is iffy or non-existence. Being cut off from the outside world is of course red meat to the thriller writer...

Question: Jericho's house, Stone Heights, is itself a character in this novel, one with its own secrets and surprises. It harks back to such stories as Wuthering Heights or Rebecca or an Agatha Christie mystery where the physical setting is as much a character as the people.  Did you have any of those stories in mind as you wrote this?
Stephen L. Carter: Oh, yes.  I remember reading Thomas Hardy as a teenager, and being fascinated by the way that the house or the pond or the moor was always brooding over the action.  Here, I had in effect two "physical" characters, the house itself, and the mountains that surround both Stone Heights and the town of Bethel. By the way, the town of Bethel is fictitious, but of course bears a biblical relation to Jericho.

Question:
In your previous books characters from earlier novels have gone on to appear in future novels.  Will we see more of any of the characters from this novel?
Stephen L. Carter: If I keep writing short thrillers like this one, we will certainly see some of these characters again.  By the way, one of the minor characters in Jericho's Fall, a law professor named Tish Kirschbaum, was also a minor character in The Emperor of Ocean Park. So I have kept the connections going.   

(Photo © Elena Seibert)

--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Publishers Weekly

Bestseller Carter, who expertly blended social commentary and devious plots in his previous novels (The Emperor of Ocean Park; New England White; Palace Council), delivers a modest spy thriller, his first work of fiction not to focus on characters from what he has termed the darker nation. The sententious opening sentence (On the Sunday before the terror began, Rebecca DeForde pointed the rental car into the sullen darkness of her distant past) sets the tone for this minor effort. Rebecca has traveled to the Colorado Rockies to visit former CIA director Jericho Ainsley, who's dying of cancer. Jericho's decades of power and influence came to an end when he began an affair with her 15 years earlier. On arrival, Rebecca learns that shadowy forces fear that Jericho will reveal damaging Company secrets, and that his life is threatened by more than illness. Fans will miss the fully realized characters and mysterious puzzles of Carter's more complex, less predictable earlier work. Author tour. (July)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Vintage; 1 Reprint edition (June 1, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 030747447X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0307474476
  • Product Dimensions: 5.1 x 0.8 x 8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (75 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #533,176 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

75 Reviews
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 (8)
4 star:
 (15)
3 star:
 (15)
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 (22)
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Average Customer Review
2.7 out of 5 stars (75 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

32 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Carter has stumbled, July 8, 2009
By 
Angela Boyter (Ellicott City, MD USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Jericho's Fall (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
I have enjoyed Carter's three previous thrillers featuring black lawyers & academics and richly drawn characters in a broad landscape. He should have stayed with a winning formula and an environment he knows but instead turned to the world of spies and financial fraud to write what he described as a "short, straightforward page turner". Would that it were!
The book opens with protagonist Beck DeForde driving to the deathbed of former CIA Director Jericho Ainsley, who had ruined his career fifteen years earlier as a result of a scandalous love affair with her at Princeton when she was a sophomore and he was a married professor. Carter attempts to establish an atmosphere of suspense with suspicious vans and helicopters hovering around Jericho's home, bodies of slaughtered animals left outside the door, the death of Ainsley's longtime caretaker under mysterious circumstances, and a multitude of visitors appearing at the door with motives unknown. Over this all hover Ainsley's two crone-like daughters (one of whom is a former interrogator for the CIA who is now an Episcopal nun) exuding a general atmosphere of hostility towards one and all. Ainsley claims to have secrets that powerful forces are prepared to kill to hide or steal, and he tries to enlist Beck to help him, although he can't quite get around to telling her what he wants her to do. There is also the strong belief by many of the characters that Ainsley is mentally ill and is making up the secrets he purports to have. As a set-up to a suspense story, this sounds fine, but after 93 pages and nine chapters I found myself screaming internally, "Okay, okay, so get on with it!" The pace is plodding.
When he does get on with it, the plot is thin, not very credible, and ultimately unsatisfying. The actions of many of the characters, including Beck, seem inadequately motivated, which makes them less interesting than in Carter's earlier books.
A good example of the lack of credibility occurs early in the book. Beck remembers an incident fifteen years earlier when three CIA security men invaded Jericho's home, apparently while he & Beck were making love, and dragged her off to be interrogated for an hour and a half, refusing to allow her to get dressed and asking her questions like the name of her fifth-grade Spanish teacher. I simply cannot believe this kind of thing would happen to current (or past) lovers of the former Director of the CIA (despite the fantasies of novelists and moviemakers), certainly not without SERIOUS provocation, and, if it had, said former director of the CIA would have assured that serious consequences would have followed. Beck also recalls unexpected visits from the CIA office of security for years after her relationship with Ainsley had stopped, including "once, they surprised her during lunch on a Caribbean cruise. Another time they showed up at a pub in Edinburgh". As a former federal employee, I am extremely skeptical that even CIA security officers have travel policies liberal enough to permit this kind of boondoggle without substantial justification.
Carter can write good thrillers. I hope in his next book he will return to his roots and write what he does well. Until then I would recommend you try one of his earlier works or find another diversion for your summer reading.
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19 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A thriller that will keep you guessing and turning the pages, June 28, 2009
By 
Sandy Kay (Twin Cities, Minnesota USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Jericho's Fall (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
I have not read Mr. Carter's earlier books so I don't know how this one compares, but if this book is any indication, I'm going to read the other ones. It caught my attention enough to keep me reading at the expense of the chores I had on my "to do" list. And I was so wrapped up reading the final pages in late evening under the porch light that I just about screamed when my neighbor walked up my sidewalk out of the darkness to say hello.

The main character, Beck DeForde, learns her former lover Jericho Ainsley, a retired spy (and Former Everything due to his importance to the CIA and espionage community), is dying and wants to see her. Their affair has been over for 15 years but she sends her young daughter to stay with her mother and goes to his secluded mountain home to say goodbye. Her motivation is part love and part guilt; she believes Jericho threw away his career for her when she was a 19 year-old college sophomore. Jericho's daughters, Pamela and Audrey, both older than Beck, are also with him.

From the time Beck arrives at the home where she lived with Jericho, neither she nor the reader knows what to believe. The daughters tell Beck his brain cancer has made him crazy but Jericho tells Beck she is in danger because "they" are coming for him. Other visitors to the home tell her Jericho has threatened to reveal secrets upon his death and either encourage her to leave or want her to help them get this information. Jericho is either speaking in riddles or is as crazy as his daughters say he is.

In between the events going on in the present, Beck thinks back on her long-ago relationship with Jericho and the effect it has had on her life as well as on his.

The characters are interesting. Much of the time, the three women are thrown together. Pamela deeply resents Beck (and always has) and the older sister "Saint Audrey" (now an Episcopal nun) tries to make peace. Jericho was a lousy mostly absent father and probably not a very good person for a naive young woman to have fallen in love with. In the present time, he is manipulative and paranoid and not helpful to Beck or his daughters in facing the danger he insists is coming. Beck can't trust what she hears from Jericho, his daughters, and most of the other people she meets. Eventually Beck comes to the point where she decides to learn the secret to protect herself and Jericho.

The reader is left for most of the book to guess what is going on because so many of the characters have reason to lie. I changed my mind every chapter as to what I thought was going to happen and who was involved. My only criticism is that the ending is too abrupt. There is action and danger and suspense and then....boom! It's over. I had to read the last chapter a couple times to make sure I hadn't missed something. I wanted to know that Beck would be all right, emotionally, physically and financially. I wanted to know she wouldn't feel guilty any more. I'm not sure if this means there will be a sequel or if the author wanted to leave the reader hanging just a little bit.

I really enjoyed this book and could not put it down (except when I had to explain to my neighbor why I got so freaked out). I liked that it wasn't easy to figure out what was happening.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Where did Stephen Carter go?, November 1, 2009
By 
Nitenurse (Here, there, but not everywhere.) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Jericho's Fall (Hardcover)
It is very hard for me to believe Stephen Carter actually wrote this book. I never finished it, to be honest. It did not engage me in any way, unlike his previous books, which I thoroughly enjoyed. Do not waste your time on this. Let's hope Mr. Carter will return to his previous form.
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