From Publishers Weekly
It is always a pleasure when a reader is in sync with the material she performs. Such is the case with Frasier's fine reading of this exciting thriller by Frost (Twin Peaks; The X-Files). A small-time florist is shot and killed, and Los Angeles homicide detective Alex Delillo is assigned to the case. What at first appears to be a simple murder investigation soon blossoms into a gut-wrenching race to stop a madman from committing a terrorist act during the annual Pasadena Rose Parade. At stake are the lives of hundreds of parade watchers, including Alex's teenage daughter. Frasier gives her detective a professional, just-the-facts voice as she relates Frost's tight mystery plot, but injects a more intimate note when she's musing over her more personal situations. As the stakes and suspense begin to heighten, so, too, does the emotion in Frasier's performance. Unlike some narrators who have problems portraying a multitude of characters and often cross the line from character into caricature when voicing the opposite sex, Frasier uses a simple and subtle shift of inflection to differentiate the variety of people populating this audiobook and keeps the flow smooth and involving. Based on the Putnam hardcover (Reviews, Jan. 10). (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
Though he has published a couple of novels--The List of Seven (1994); The Six Messiahs (1995)--Frost is probably better known as the cowriter of the cult TV show Twin Peaks. In this thriller, he introduces a series that has a good chance to bring him much wider recognition. Lieutenant Alex Delillo has mastered many challenges on her way to the top of Pasadena's homicide division. But the detective feels like a failure in her other job, as single mother to her teenage daughter, Lacy. Within hours of the story's start, Delillo's professional and personal lives come together in a horrifying way when Lacy reveals her ambitions as an ecoterrorist, a man is shot in a break-in, a bomb hospitalizes Delillo's partner--and it appears that the events may all be related. When Lacy goes missing, an emotionally unraveling Delillo stays on the job, wondering whether she'll get a second chance to make things right with her daughter. Frost has created a puzzle with razor-sharp edges, and as the stakes grow, he keeps putting new pieces on the table. The prose is sometimes overdone (the editor should have imposed a one-simile-per-page maximum), but Run the Risk was written for people who like their books frantic and frightening, and by those measures, it delivers the goods. Keir Graff
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

