From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Bestseller Huston (
Secret Justice) grabs the reader by the lapels with the opening sentence of the first chapter of this outstanding thriller: If my radio alarm had gone off, I would have known the president was dead. During a violent thunderstorm, President James Adams takes off in Marine One from the White House for a supersecret meeting at Camp David. A few miles out, the helicopter begins to disintegrate and plunges to the ground, killing everyone aboard. The helicopter's French company, WorldCopter, hires Annapolis attorney Mike Nolan to defend it against charges of criminal responsibility. Mike soon finds there are a number of possible culprits to pin the crash on, including the rabidly conservative Marine Corps pilot and the mysterious men who were awaiting the president at Camp David. Mike powers the case forward, even though the government warns him away and assassins attempt to kill him. This is nonstop legal suspense at its best.
(May) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
This gripping thriller opens with a bang: Marine One, the official presidential helicopter, crashes, killing everyone aboard, including the president. Mike Nolan, an attorney who’s also a helicopter pilot, is hired by the manufacturer of Marine One to defend the company against a wrongful-death suit filed by the First Lady. Mike knows that he will have to find out what caused the crash, whether it really was a defective copter or if there is some other explanation. The problem is, the list of potential other explanations is very short, and all of them could put Mike’s own life in jeopardy. The author smoothly combines the political-conspiracy and courtroom-drama formats, and he nicely explores the story’s fundamental moral quandary: If Mike’s client made a defective product, is he defending the people who killed the president? The book has echoes of Michael Crichton’s Airframe, which was about the investigation of an incident involving a commercial jet, but this isn’t a technothriller so much as a political thriller with technological overtones. Either way, it works just fine. --David Pitt
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.