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The Intercept

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
“Part police procedural and part ticking-bomb thriller,” an espionage novel from the celebrated creator of Law and Order television franchise (The New York Times).
Days before the July Fourth holiday and the dedication of One World Trade Center at Ground Zero, an incident aboard a commercial jet reminds everyone involved that vigilance saves lives.
But New York Police detective Jeremy Fisk—from the department’s Intelligence Division, a well-funded anti-terror unit modeled upon the CIA—suspects that the event is a warning sign that another, potentially more extraordinary scheme has been set in motion. So when a passenger from the same plane disappears into the crowds of Manhattan, it’s up to Fisk and his partner Krina Gersten to find him before the celebrations begin . . . And time is running out.
“Combines the brainy suspense and unfiltered social commentary found in the best Law & Order episodes.” —Booklist
“A nail-biting, page-turning, twisty suspense.” —Harlan Coben, #1 New York Times–bestselling author of Stay Close
“A spectacular fiction debut.” —Library Journal, starred review
“Dick Wolf has proven he’s a master storyteller in any form.” —Michael Connelly, #1 New York Times–bestselling author of The Fifth Witness
“Fascinating, tense, and twisty.” —Lee Child, #1 New York Times–bestselling author of The Affair
“An action-packed masterpiece.” —Brad Thor, #1 New York Times–bestselling author of Black List
“An adrenaline-fueled, ripped-from-the-headlines suspense novel.” —Lisa Gardner, The New York Times–bestselling author of Catch Me
“Grabs your attention on page one and holds it until the breathtaking ending.” —Nelson DeMille, The New York Times–bestselling author of The Lion
“Smart, suspenseful . . . should rank with the best of this year’s thrillers.” —The Washington Post
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 22, 2012
      Reviewed by Bruce DeSilva. A lone al-Qaeda terrorist armed with a hard-to-detect obsidian knife tries to hijack a cross-Atlantic airliner and crash it into midtown Manhattan, but five passengers and a flight attendant wrestle him to the floor and subdue him. The Six, as they quickly become known, are celebrated as new American heroes. Lionized by the media, they are promptly folded into New York City’s Fourth of July celebration and the upcoming dedication of the new World Trade Center tower.\tEnter Jeremy Fisk of the NYPD’s Intelligence division. The veteran detective worries that the terrorist plot was foiled too easily—that the attempted hijacking could have been a diversion to conceal something much, much bigger. And with both President Barack Obama and former President George W. Bush due in town for the dedication, the stakes couldn’t be higher.\tThat is the premise of Dick Wolf’s debut novel, The Intercept. Wolf is best known as the creator of NBC-TV’s Law & Order, the longest-running drama in television history, but the stunning plot twists, graphic violence, and frantic pace of the novel are more reminiscent of a season of 24. Wolf spins his yarn in a voice that is clear and precise, but not particularly stylish—the kind of writing found in the best newspaper police reporting. Although the novel is billed as the first in a series featuring Jeremy Fisk, the main character is not well-drawn, coming off as a generic good-guy cop. Wolf does a better job with Fisk’s partner and secret lover, Krina Gersten, a smart and vivacious woman who resents that she is assigned to babysit the Six while Fisk is on the street hunting terrorists.\tSeveral real people including Osama bin Laden, singer-songwriter Paul Simon, New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg, and the city’s police commissioner, Ray Kelly, make cameo appearances.But the most vivid characters are the Six, each of whom reacts quite differently to the rush of celebrity. At one end of the spectrum is Colin Frank, a journalist who can’t stop scheming to snag book and movie deals. At the other is Alain Nouvian, a cellist who wishes everyone would leave him alone. Wolf’s take on the American media’s obsession with celebrity, and the way these characters cope with it and with one another, provides some of the book’s finest moments. The Intercept doesn’t quite measure up to the best of the thriller genre—to the likes of John Sanford and Joseph Finder—but Wolf, an Emmy-winning screenwriter, director, and TV producer, is off to a promising start as a novelist. (Jan.) Bruce DeSilva, winner of the Edgar and Macavity awards, is the author of Cliff Walk and Rogue Island.

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