14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Formulaic; an unsuspenseful "thriller", July 21, 2008
In a sequel to last year's "Killer Weekend", Sun Valley Sheriff Walt Fleming is back, again juggling the mess of his personal life with his duties as a lawman.
Trying to solve the mystery of the disappearance of one of his best friends while also trying to solve the murder of that friend's brother, Fleming stumbles into a possible conspiracy with much broader implications and possible national ramifications.
It sounds better than it plays, unfortunately.
First, and most tediously, Fleming seems to be a very annoyingly passive-aggressive character who can't seem to get off the dime and make a decision about ANYTHING!
His wife's run off to shack up with his best deputy, abandoning him and their two young twin daughters. Fleming can't seem to decide how to deal with this in any way: fire the deputy? Fulfill his parental duties? File for divorce? Nada. Nothing happens, other than endless and boring angst and self-recriminations. He won't do or say anything much to the deputy; abandons his kids, essentially, to a caretaker; is afraid of his ex-wife; is too wussy to date anyone else.
We should care why?
As to the actual "mystery" itself, it's almost totally lost in the soap opera about Fleming's personal life and travel brochure descriptions of the Sun Valley area.
Yes, it's a beautiful place; I get it.
The characterizations of the secondary players range from thin and two-dimensional to virtually non-existent. Kira, the victim of a brutal rape in the opening segment, is a completely cartoonish character, for example; yet her rape is one of the driving events of the plot.
The "action" segments are strung together almost haphazardly. There's seldom a coherent flow to events, and some are completely skipped, only referred to in later dialogue in which you learn the outcome.
My three stars are generous, and are earned by Pearson's earlier works and the resultant goodwill from them.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
THE ULTIMATE SNOW JOB, July 23, 2008
Topnotch author Ridley Pearson has lived in the Sun Valley area for some twenty years, so he knows the setting for his story well. Perhaps that's one reason why his scenes are so vivid, seeming to appear before our eyes in full color. Of course, setting is not all this writer knows well as the number of his books on bestseller lists clearly show. He knows how to spin a thriller from opening line to often shocking finish, which he surely does with Killer View.
Sun Valley Sheriff Walt Fleming doesn't hesitate for a nano second when he receives a nighttime call saying that a skier is missing. He assembles his top men as a search and rescue team and goes out into the bone chilling blackness. With him are his best friend, veterinarian Mark Aker, Mark's brother, Randy, and deputy Tommy Brandon. Walt feels little friendship for Tommy due to the deputy's history with Walt's former wife. But Walt is a professional and a job needs to be done.
That job immediately takes a surprising twist when Randy is fatally shot and Mark disappears. It isn't long before a young girl who works at the veterinarians' office is cruelly assaulted. She arrives at a local hospital with no memory of her attacker. Now, Walt is faced with a murder, a missing man, and an assault victim. As he proceeds with his investigation he becomes aware that sheep in the area are falling ill. How does all or any of this tie together and why would a prominent congressman call Walt of all possible sheriffs and tell him to come to Washington to fill in for a conference drop out?
Following Pearson's finely, logically constructed story is both exciting and absorbing. A narration by Audie Award winner Christopher Lane lends additional pleasure, leaving this listener hoping to hear much more from him in the future.
- Gail Cooke
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Just OK, July 20, 2008
A Kid's Review
Ridley Pearson is one of my favorite authors; however, his last few attempts have been lukewarm. He really needs to get back to basics and write another in the Lou Boldt series. They were wonderful.
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