Wild Fire by Nelson DeMille

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(Mass Market Paperback - Reprint)

  • Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
  • Pub. Date: November 2007
  • ISBN-13: 9780446617772
  • Sales Rank: 20,798
  • 720pp
  • Series: John Corey Series, #4
  • Edition Description: Reprint
 
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Synopsis

Welcome to the Custer Hill Club - a men's club set in an Adirondack hunting lodge whose members include some of America's most powerful business leaders, military men, and government officials. Ostensibly, the club is a place to relax with old friends. But one fall weekend, the club's Executive Board gathers to talk about 9/11 - and finalize a retaliation plan, known only by its code name: WILD FIRE

That same weekend, a member of the Federal Anti-Terrorist Task Force is found dead. Soon it's up to Detective John Corey and his wife, FBI Agent Kate Mayfield, to unravel a plot that starts with the Custer Hill Club and ends with American cities locked in the crosshairs of a nuclear device. Only Corey and Mayfield can stop the button from being pushed, and global chaos from being unleashed...

More chilling than yesterday's headlines and as prophetic as tomorrow's, Wild Fire will challenge you to question everything you thought you knew about your leaders and your country while thrilling you with suspense that builds with every page.

Publishers Weekly

New York City police detective– turned–terrorist hunter John Corey and his FBI agent wife, Kate, head to the Adirondacks to investigate the murder of a fellow agent and, not coincidentally, to stop a right-wing madman from nuking two major American cities and starting World War III. In previous adventures, Corey has been a welcome reminder of the wise-cracking hard-boiled heroes of yore. Here he dances close enough to the edge of self-parody that a narrator unfamiliar with the earlier novels might have been tempted to employ the kind of insouciant smart-aleck approach that would have turned the character into a cartoon figure and flatlined the book's suspense. As Brick states in a 20-minute chat with the author, he's been a longtime DeMille fan and past narrator of two Corey adventures. Brick sees past the character's wisecracks, tempering his brags and brays with a humanizing hint of self-doubt, suggesting that purpose and simmering anger lurk beneath the glib nonsense. He's equally adept at catching the villain's upper class arrogance and Kate's controlled, no-nonsense approach to life. He can switch attitudes and voices in a split second. Brick turns the talky book into an entertaining and effective full-cast comedy-drama. Simultaneous release with the Warner hardcover (Reviews, Sept. 11) (Nov.)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

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Biography

With his taut, suspenseful, and well researched thrillers, Nelson DeMille has become one of the most popular writers working today, publishing bestseller after bestseller. In books such as Plum Island and Word of Honor, DeMille gives us breakneck plots featuring strong characters with difficult decisions to make, and readers can’t tear their eyes away.

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Customer Reviews

good story hated coreyby Anonymous

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August 04, 2008: i enjoyed the plot but i had a hard time reading the book because of john corey. he ruined the story for me, the jokes were tiresome and out of place. when corey wasn't wisecracking' which wasn't often' the story was good. please do not use him again.i like your stories but will not read the book if corey is in it.

Enough with the Corey Shtickby Anonymous

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May 25, 2008: The story is a good one and well-deveoped, but I agree with some of the other reviews relative to the John Corey character. His excessive and often predictable wise-cracks just aren't funny, and in fact have me hoping the character gets knocked off. Enough already Nelson, Corey/you are not that funny.


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