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It’s no secret that Harlan Coben’s name is synonymous with unrelenting suspense. In this compelling fifth novel in his acclaimed Myron Bolitar series, the unforgettable sports agent agrees to protect basketball star Brenda Slaughter while trying to unravel the tragic riddle of her life.
As a big-time New York sports agent, Myron has a professional interest in Brenda. Then a personal one. But between them isn’t just the difference in their backgrounds or the color of their skin. Between them is a chasm of corruption and lies, a vicious young mafioso on the make, and one secret that some people are dying to keep–and others are killing to protect.
Call One False Move a slam dunk.
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.
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August 22, 2009: Great read. Just what you want from a Harlan Coben Myron Bolitar book. Fun, excitement, and a few twists. As usual Win adds that extra something to the book. Enjoy.
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?
It’s no secret that Harlan Coben’s name is synonymous with unrelenting suspense. In this compelling fifth novel in his acclaimed Myron Bolitar series, the unforgettable sports agent agrees to protect basketball star Brenda Slaughter while trying to unravel the tragic riddle of her life.
As a big-time New York sports agent, Myron has a professional interest in Brenda. Then a personal one. But between them isn’t just the difference in their backgrounds or the color of their skin. Between them is a chasm of corruption and lies, a vicious young mafioso on the make, and one secret that some people are dying to keep–and others are killing to protect.
Call One False Move a slam dunk.
Must reading....Combines Chandler's wry wit with Ross Macdonald's moral complexity.
Poignant and insightful... Myron is gallant, likeable and delightfully original.
Consistently entertaining.... Coben moves himself into the front ranks of mystery fiction alongside heavy hitters like Robert B. Parker, Sue Grafton and Robert Crais...And what a plot. Coben unwinds his most twisted, double-backing, surprise-packed story line yet.
Mystery readers who like their danger spiked with irreverent wit and quirky characters should look no further.
This is one of the funniest, yet most complex and contemplative series to appear in ages...the action is steady, the dialogue so good you wouldn't miss the action, and the plot a carefully constructed beauty.
Easily in the running for best-of-the-year honors, a story deftly combining dark suspense with wry humor and pathos.
This is one of those thrillers that you can't put down…thoroughly engaging.
Coben displays all the right moves -- snappy dialogue, fast pacing, neat plotting -- to make One False Move a winner. Myron's some serious competition for Robert Parker's Spenser.
Coben's energetic approach keeps the suspense high in this twisty tale that continues to surprise as it entertains... Snappy dialogue and Myron's witty one-liners and wry take on life can outshine most standup comics...One False Move scores big. Coben's sharp humor and precise plotting are foul proof.
Series sports agent Myron Bolitar handles everything with panache: his relationships, his clients, and this search for two missing people. When a sports store mogul asks him to "watch over" basketball star Brenda Slaughter, Myron winds up looking for her father, who disappeared a week ago, and her mother, who deserted the family some 20 years earlier. Myron not only discovers mob interest in female basketball but also a connected suspicious death in a high-profile political family. Standard plotting, then, but authentic conversation, colorful characters, and exciting New York and New Jersey surrounds more than compensate. Strongly recommended. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 2/15/98.]
It is rare to find a novel that appeals on so many levels. The mystery is complex and Myron is a protagonist who draws me in to the story with both his sense of purpose and his smartass comments....I am proof that you don't have to have a particular interest in sports to appreciate these books. This was a very satisfying read; one of the best mystery novels I've read in a long, long time.
Fast-talking sports agent Myron Bolitar won't win any awards for baseball (since his Little League brushback) or basketball (thanks to his bum knee), but his paperback detective work has already won him an Anthony, a Shamus, and an Edgar. His hardcover debut dangles an appealing potential client in front of himBrenda Slaughter, basketball star of the New York Dolphinsbut there's a catch: Before he can sign her, he has to protect her from the threats she's been getting, and maybe even track down her missing parents (Dad's been gone a week, Mom 20 years). What could anybody have against Brendaunless it's the mobsters who want to press her into defecting to a rival women's league, or the wealthy and well-connected Arthur Bradford, the gubernatorial candidate determined to keep the truth about his wife's ancient suicide under wraps, or all the New Jersey cops who are either on Bradford's payroll or would like to be? Undaunted, Myron and his Spenser-inspired entouragehis bisexual assistant Esperanza Diaz, his financial-planning associate Windsor Horne Lockwood III (who, despite his blond complexion, probably shaves in front of a photo of Spenser's buddy Hawk), and his ex-wrestler temp Big Cyndi, who doesn't like to be called just Cynditake on every soul in New Jersey with a gun, a bank account, and a bad attitude, and uncover a satisfyingly complex tangle of skullduggery. Could Myron, who pushes his wisecracking charm hard, be any more tough and adorable? It'll be a pleasure waiting for the next installment to find out.
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