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Edgar Award-winner Harlan Coben brings us his most astonishing—and deeply personal—novel yet. And it all begins when Myron Bolitar's ex tells him he's a father ... of a dying thirteen-year-old boy.
Myron never saw it coming. A surprise visit from an ex-girlfriend is unsettling enough. But Emily Downing's news brings him to his knees. Her son Jeremy is dying and needs a bone-marrow transplant—from a donor who has vanished without a trace. Then comes the real shocker: The boy is Myron's son, conceived the night before her wedding to another man.
Staggered by the news, Myron plunges into a search for the missing donor. But finding him means cracking open a dark mystery that involves a broken family, a brutal kidnapping spree, and the FBI. Somewhere in the sordid mess is the donor who disappeared. And as doubts emerge about Jeremy's true paternity, a child vanishes, igniting a chain reaction of heartbreaking truth and chilling revelation.
Harlan Coben has outdone himself with Darkest Fear, the thrill read of the season. This plot is a nail-biter, and Coben explores the relationships between fathers and sons as keenly as he plots suspense.
More Reviews and RecommendationsIn his mysteries -- many of which star sports agent Myron Bolitar -- Harlan Coben leavens the intrigue with a surprise ingredient: humor. The result: books as fun to read as they are to solve, with distinct and colorful characters the reader is always happy to visit with, again and again.
More About the AuthorReader Rating:
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July 05, 2009: Since reading "Darkest Fear", I've also read #7 and #8 (final) in the Myron Bolitar series. In my estimation, this series is a must read! I am holding onto these books because I know they're worth re-reading. I love Harlan Coben's off-beat sense of human and his one-liners add a sense of reality to the character of Myron Bolitar.
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May 07, 2009: I have read 4 Coben books so far,The woods,Tell No One,Gone For Good & Darkest Fear,& Darkest Fear was the least favorite of the group.The book's plot seemed to bog down at times.Harlan Coben is the best & I'll definitely read all his books.Glenn
Name:
Harlan Coben
Current Home:
Ridgewood, New Jersey
Date of Birth:
January 04, 1962
Place of Birth:
Newark, New Jersey
Education:
B.A. in political science, Amherst College, 1984
Awards:
Edgar Award for Fade Away; Shamus Award for Drop Shot; Anthony Award for Deal Breaker
Harlan Coben may be the only mystery writer to have inspired the dubious endorsement, "Raymond Chandler meets Bridget Jones" (as the Chicago Tribune wrote about Darkest Fear). But it's not hard to see what the critic means: Coben knows how to create a good chase, but he is also adept at generating laughs along the way. His books often start with a few pieces of bad news and end with the closet door flung open to reveal a few skeletons.
Debuting in 1995, the series that cemented Coben's reputation revolves around Myron Bolitar, a wisecracking sports agent who always finds himself getting into trouble, via his clients or his own past. What's endearing about these books is Coben's willingness to have fun as he spins a story. He might poke fun the yuppie wardrobe of Bolitar's partner, Win, or his gal Friday (and sometime female wrestler), Big Cyndi's, tendency to wear "more makeup than the cast of Cats." There's a slight boys' club air to the series, but it's more frat house than locker room -- or more appropriately, rec room, since Bolitar finds himself still living at his parents' in his early 30s.
Sports-averse readers should not avoid the Bolitar books; in the end, sports play only a peripheral role in the story, which is primarily about the mystery. Given this, it's not surprising that Coben has called William Goldman's Marathon Man one of his favorite thrillers and has cited Philip Roth and Alfred Hitchcock as influences.
And yes, there's certainly life beyond Bolitar! Coben has crafted a number of superb stand-alone thrillers filled with tortuous twists and turns and peopled with characters you can't help but root for. In a 2001 interview, the author stated, "I love a book that sneaks up behind you at the end and slaps you in the back of the head." Ultimately, that describes everything in Harlan Coben's oeuvre.
Coben has four children with wife Anne, his sweetheart since age 20.
Coben advises aspiring writers thusly: "Write. Don't take classes. Don't join workshops. Don't listen to me," he told the Charlotte Austin Review. "Just write. Oh, and cut. Cut a lot. You're probably not editing yourself enough. Then rewrite. Then rewrite again. Repeat. Like with shampooing."
Coben says his mother was his best literary inspiration in an interview with the Page One literary newsletter. "We'd go to the old Barnes & Noble in Manhattan (back then, if you can believe this, I think there was only one) and spend the entire day. We didn't have much money back then and we almost never bought toys -- but we were always allowed to get whatever books we wanted."
In our interview, Coben shared more fun facts:
"I once worked as a tour guide in the Costa del Sol of Spain."
"I pretty much only wear Lilly Pulitzer ties because my best friend owns the company."
What are your all-time favorite books -- and what makes them special to you?
What are some of your favorite films?
How about music?
And from my high school days:
What are your favorite books to give -- and get -- as gifts?
A great gift is Bird by Bird by Anne Lamott. Purportedly a writer's guide, Lamott's book describes the creative process -- and by extension, the insecurities of life -- as well as anything out there. It's also witty and great fun.
What else can you tell your readers about yourself? Any favorite hobbies or pastimes?
Frankly I'm fairly boring or fairly busy. Between writing and family, I have little time for anything else. I'm thinking of taking up golf, but the idea of spending time with golfers frightens me. Any suggestions?
Bolitar Speechless? Shocking, but True
He's smart-mouthed. He's shrewd. And try as he may, he just can't seem to live a simple life as a sports agent. Myron Bolitar is back, and he's about to find himself speechless, in Edgar Award-winning Harlan Coben's latest, Darkest Fear.
Things are not looking good at MB Sportsreps. Business is floundering, their client wall is looking like a patchwork of has-beens, and even Myron's receptionist, Big Cyndi, is throwing in the towel. Myron's personal life is in a shambles as well -- he's crashing at Win's Central Park West apartment, his parents are selling the house he grew up in, and his father is not in good health. It looks like things can't get any worse, until his ex-girlfriend from college, Emily, calls him with news that will change his life forever.
Emily, who married Myron's on-court archrival from days as a college basketball player, Greg Downing (who, incidentally, ended Myron's career with a knee injury), has troubles of her own. Her son, Jeremy, is dying of leukemia, and only a bone-marrow transplant can save his life. In a twist of fate that could turn fatal, they've found a match in the marrow registry -- but the mysterious donor is nowhere to be found. And then Emily hits him with the really big news: Jeremy is Myron's son, conceived the night before Emily married Greg. Floored by sudden fatherhood and the fear that it will all be taken from him before he has the chance to understand what this revelation might mean, Myron will stop at nothing to find the mysterious donor.
But even with the expert assistance of Esperanza and Win, his manhunt proves to be the challenge of a lifetime, and he's going to need all the help he can get -- even going so far as to grudgingly team up with his former rival, Greg. Spying the donor's name out of the registry's confidential files, Myron and Greg follow a lead to rural Connecticut. And while what they find appears to be a deadend, it raises more questions than answers, and they soon realize they've opened the door to a nightmare of inestimable proportions.
The name of the donor, Davis Taylor, appears to be the new identity of Dennis Lex, a long-missing son of a wealthy and infamously private novelist, Raymond Lex. But why would Dennis Lex change his name, and why would he vanish without a trace? But that's just the beginning. It seems Dennis Lex, or Davis Taylor, is in some way affiliated with an unemployed journalist with a dark past, Stan Gibbs, who was fired for publishing a plagiarized interview with a serial kidnapper. It seems the "Sow the Seeds" kidnapper, a vicious sociopath who thrived on the darkest fears of his victims' families, was a fictional character stolen straight out of a horror novel. And no one believes he is real -- until he resurfaces and strikes again.
Darkest Fear is more than a mystery; it is also a story about fatherhood, about homecoming, and about the basest of human instincts. But while this is a case that hits home for Myron, don't worry -- he's not getting completely sappy on you. He's every bit the cocky smart-ass you expect him to be, and more. With the stakes raised, Myron roars through this novel with a mouth that cracks like a whip, with his fearsome sidekick Win who likes to crack skulls. As they get closer and closer to the missing donor and possibly the kidnapper, this novel positively sizzles with some of the hottest detective work you've ever seen and twists and turns that would make even the most savvy sleuth trip on his laces.
Harlan Coben throws out the playbook in this new novel, which is a full-court press with suspense and full of surprises in the final quarter. Myron Bolitar fans: This one is a slam dunk.
Elise Vogel is a freelance writer who lives in New York City.
Edgar Award-winner Harlan Coben brings us his most astonishing—and deeply personal—novel yet. And it all begins when Myron Bolitar's ex tells him he's a father ... of a dying thirteen-year-old boy.
Myron never saw it coming. A surprise visit from an ex-girlfriend is unsettling enough. But Emily Downing's news brings him to his knees. Her son Jeremy is dying and needs a bone-marrow transplant—from a donor who has vanished without a trace. Then comes the real shocker: The boy is Myron's son, conceived the night before her wedding to another man.
Staggered by the news, Myron plunges into a search for the missing donor. But finding him means cracking open a dark mystery that involves a broken family, a brutal kidnapping spree, and the FBI. Somewhere in the sordid mess is the donor who disappeared. And as doubts emerge about Jeremy's true paternity, a child vanishes, igniting a chain reaction of heartbreaking truth and chilling revelation.
Harlan Coben has outdone himself with Darkest Fear, the thrill read of the season. This plot is a nail-biter, and Coben explores the relationships between fathers and sons as keenly as he plots suspense.
"Witty" sports agent Myron Bolitar faces the toughest case of his career, when his ex-girlfriend reappears with devastating news: Not only is her thirteen-year-old son dying, but the boy is Bolitar's biological son, conceived the night before her wedding to another man. "An exciting story with plenty of twists and turns. Never a lull in the action." "An excellent afternoon's escape." "Jerry Maguire, move over."
Book seven in Coben's wonderfully rich series (after 1999's The Final Detail), which features sports agent Myron Bolitar, former basketball player and totally believable human being, is all about fathers, sons and the intricate and often painful chains that link them together. Myron, who has just moved out of his parents' house at the age of 34, is worried about his father's health after a heart attack, but it's hard for either of them to talk about the older man's condition. Myron tends to have long relationships with women that end in tears. ("You're in your mid-thirties, single, sensitive, and you like show tunes," says his current lover, a troubled television star. "If you were a better dresser, I'd say you were gay.") Emily, his college girlfriend from Duke who dumped him for a more successful basketball rival, re-enters the picture to tell him that her critically ill 13-year-old son needs a bone marrow transplant, but the only suitable registered donor has disappeared. Can Myron find him? And, by the way--Myron is the boy's real father. The search takes Myron deep into some decades-old unsolved crimes involving another father and son--a sadistic deranged killer and a conflicted newspaper columnist. Myron's deadly preppy friend, Win, is on hand to supply his own frightening brand of violence, and the gorgeous Esperanza Diaz, the former wrestler who's now a full partner in MB SportsReps, supplies wisdom as well as glamour. But the heart of the novel is, as always, the fallible but infinitely appealing, accessible figure of Myron Bolitar--a modern Don Quixote complete with knee brace and cell phone, ready to take on the world's problems. (June) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|
Manhattan sports agent Myron Bolitar is shocked when his former college lover informs him he is the father of her 13-year-old son, who has anemia. But the girlfriend--now inimically divorced from her husband--only uses that fact to convince him to locate the boy's bone-marrow donor, who has disappeared. Bolitar's subsequent quest pits him against a wealthy, publicity-shy, and bitterly scrapping family with hitherto secret connections to a crazed kidnapper. Crisp, focused prose, a wisecracking but gallant hero, and a busy plot make this essential for most collections. Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.\
YA-Struggling to keep his sports agency afloat, Myron Bolitar is not thrilled to have a former girlfriend resurface after many years. Sadly, her 13-year-old son desperately needs a bone-marrow transplant from a person who has mysteriously disappeared. The woman asks for Myron's help in locating the missing donor and confides to him that he is the boy's father. Against his better judgment, the protagonist begins to search for the man who can save Jeremy's life. The plot twists are numerous as Myron stumbles upon a powerful family hiding a grave secret, a serial killer reinvented from a plagiarized novel, and a missing person with a dual identity. Myron's wit and personality- plus his partners, Win and lesbian-wrestler lawyer Esperanza-add a light touch whenever the novel becomes too dark. Suspense, mystery, DNA matching, missing persons, and a shoot-out at the end will keep YAs enthralled. This seventh book in the series will make new fans and not disappoint old ones.-Katherine Fitch, Rachel Carson Middle School, Fairfax, VA Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.
Years after a mauled knee ended his basketball career in his first preseason game, sports agent Myron Bolitar is still taking body blows. The latest is the news that he has a son by Emily Downing, the college sweetheart whose wedding to rival hoopster Greg Downing he celebrated perhaps too vigorously with her the night before. Emily's kept her secret for 13 years, but now that Jeremy's been diagnosed with life-threatening Fanconi anemia, she begs his help in locating a bone-marrow donor who'd be a perfect match for their son if only he hadn't vanished. And it gets worse. Myron's search for the missing donor swiftly drags him into the nightmare world of a serial kidnapper whose whispered phone mantra to his victims' loved ones"Sow the seeds"has been spreading terror for years; to the reporter whose exclusive stories on the kidnapper sent his career soaring before wrecking it and killing his girlfriend; and to the obscenely wealthy Lex family, whose members aren't shy about using their money to destroy anyone who crosses their pathanyone like Myron, for instance. As the complications deepen, the oppressively playful badinage of the opening chapters falls away, revealing Coben (The Final Detail, 1999, etc.) once again as one of the most inventive plotters in the businessuntil he tries one spin too many with an epilogue that's too twisty, too sentimental, and way too long. Even so, Myron runs rings around most of the tough-guy competition in the amateur division, like a class clown who's much more than just a funny face.
Loading...B&N.com: Myron's got his hands pretty full in Darkest Fear. For the benefit of those unfamiliar with your new novel, what is he -- along with Win, Esperanza, and Co. -- up against?
Harlan Coben: Darkest Fear is a suspense thriller about fathers and sons. Right away, Myron is hit with a double whammy. His college sweetheart tells him that her 13-year-old son Jeremy will die without a bone-marrow transplant and that the donor has vanished. And then, before Myron can digest this news, she hits him with a bigger surprise: Jeremy is actually Myron's son.
B&N.com: Tell us a bit about Myron Bolitar. Who is this guy?
Harlan Coben: Myron is a big-hearted, wisecracking sports agent/sleuth who loves his family and friends and can't stay out of trouble. Like most of us, he tries his best but he messes up. He's hopelessly confused in affairs of the heart. He's vulnerable yet courageous.
B&N.com: What is your darkest fear?
HC: That no one will read the book. Drum roll. Thank you, I'm here all week.
B&N.com: There's a lot of "dark" in Darkest Fear. Seems even Myron has a dark side. I mean, I know this fatherhood thing can be stressful, but he beat that lawyer silly. How do you think Myron handled the situation?
HC: Not well -- but realistically. We all have breaking points. Fiction should be about the unsafe, the edges, the foul lines. I love to play there.
B&N.com: There's a lot of "dark" in Darkest Fear, but there's a lot of laughs too. Like Myron, do you believe laughter is a good -- if not the best -- medicine?
HC: I'm not sure Myron believes that. He uses humor as a defense mechanism, too. When he gets nervous, he has a tendency to wisecrack. That's where most of the humor comes from -- that, and people. Let's face it. People are dang funny.
B&N.com: Bone-marrow cancer plays a large roll in Darkest Fear. I was horrified to learn how insanely difficult it is for those inflicted to find a matching donor. What can your average Joe do to help?
HC: Please call 1-800-MARROW2. All you have to do is give a little blood -- less than you would for a blood donation -- and you can save a life. Amazing when you think about it.
B&N.com: Darkest Fear touches on another shocking issue: corruption in journalism -- plagiarism, made-up sources, made-up dialogue, even made-up conversations. Any idea how rampant a problem this is in the real world?
HC: My sources -- excellent reporters at top-notch media venues -- tell me that it's definitely out there and that it gets worse. Like every other business, reporting is competitive. People often cheat to get an advantage.
B&N.com: Think Myron will ever tie the knot? How about Win? Do you get many fan letters pleading for a Myron/Esperanza romance? Or are folks happy with Terese?
HC: It's a funny thing. I plan my endings and work very hard on my plots. But as for what happens in Myron's personal life...well, that's a pretty organic process. Will he stay with Terese? Will he and Win always be friends? Will Esperanza work out as Myron's business partner? I don't know. But I look forward to finding out.
B&N.com: Darkest Fear combines suspense and humor with insight into father-son relationships. At this stage in his life, Myron's on both sides of the coin -- he's a father (sort of) and a son. Do you think Myron will make a good father?
HC: Yes. But we'll have to see. I don't want to give away much, but Esperanza offers wonderful insight into this situation late in the book. I'll let the reader find out where.
B&N.com: Two of your female characters, Esperanza and Big Cyndi, are former professional wrestlers. Be honest now: Are you a fan of F.L.O.W. (Fabulous Ladies of Wrestling)?
HC: Uh, no. But I love these two characters. They are warm and funny and real and oh-so-dear to me. I'm glad people react so strongly to them.
B&N.com: What's up next for Mr. Bolitar? Ever think of writing a non-Myron Bolitar novel?
HC: Actually, the next novel, Big Tears Fall, is not a Myron book. It will be out in Summer 2001.
B&N.com: Looking forward to it. Harlan, thanks so much for answering our questions today. Best of luck with Darkest Fear!
HC: Thanks, dude. You go, boy!
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