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(Mass Market Paperback - Reprint)
Average Customer Rating:
(19 ratings)
Sidney Archer thinks her life is perfect until her husband is killed in a fiery plane crash. Or was he? The FBI thinks he caused the crash and escaped unharmed. Now Sidneyand the rest of the countryis on the hunt for Jason Archer.
With sales of his first novel, Absolute Power (LJ 11/15/95), topping 300,000 copies and a movie version scheduled for release in spring 1997, Baldacci is living high on the hog. In this second effort, a woman seeks the truth about her husband's death in a plane crash.
More Reviews and RecommendationsA Washington, D.C.-based lawyer-turned-author, David Baldacci writes legal thrillers that are as tightly constructed as they are authoritative. Readers know his books, with their cinematic plots and colorful details, are sure to offer the sort of breathless entertainment that thrillers always promise but can’t always deliver.
More About the Author
Number of Reviews: 19
Average Rating:
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Was pretty good
Reuss, an avid reader, 04/20/2008
The book was filled with twists. A good plot with many sub plots, typical Baldacci. However the ending left me a bit bitter. The ending could have been so much better. I also think the books main character was a bit to bold. She was to strong of a character regardless of the situations she faced in the book. Baldacci's other works are bit better in this regard thankfully. Good stuff except the last 100 pages or so
Also recommended: Vince Flynn, Patterson, Woods
Cleverly written but a tad to much?
RC, professional, 04/20/2008
My third book from Baldacci and it was quite the novel. The book is cleverly written but just a little overboard on the heroics of the main character. Sidney - the dainty housewife, mother and part time attorney who doubles as Rambo is a little to much for me to grasp. I believe alot of the scenarios in the book while plausible are a bit to over the top. She is fearless. The other problem with the book I had is. It is just to long. This is a constant issue with many other Baldacci fans - He overwrites. This book definitely has that problem. The paperback was at 700 pages. I would say 100-150 pages of useless banter under the delete key would have made this a better book. I still think he is a great writer. I have decided to read a few more of his since he is quite good at what he does. I can get past the over writing issue I just hope the next book I read the main character is not a super hero like Sidney. If you are looking for a talented writer in this genre you may not need not look any further. He will fit the bill. I have recommended him to several folks and they are all impressed for the most part.
Also recommended: Ridley Pearson - Michael Connelly - Vince Flynn are tops in my book. Baldacci is in the top 7 of my favorite writers but no one tops the 3 above in my opinion.
More Customer Reviews
Name:
David Baldacci
Current Home:
Northern Virginia
Date of Birth:
1960
Place of Birth:
Richmond, VIrginia
Education:
B.A. in Political Science, Virginia Commonwealth University, 1983; J.D., University of Virginia, 1986
David Baldacci's authoritative legal thrillers operate on the irresistible notion that a sinister undercurrent threads through the country's most powerful institutions.
While his stories hinge on the complex machinations behind the presidency, the FBI, the Supreme Court and other spheres of influence, Baldacci (a former Washington, D.C.-based attorney) finds his way into a mystery through the eyes of the innocents. Semi-innocents, at least: small players who often don't realize they're players at all end up hunting down answers, and their hunt becomes the reader's.
According to Baldacci, reading John Irving's The World According to Garp convinced him that he wanted to be a novelist. Absolute Power -- in which a thief finds himself accidentally connected to a murder involving the president and the ensuing coverup -- was hardly Irvingesque; but it did begin Baldacci's friendly relationship with the bestseller lists, which has continued over his writing career.
Baldacci's style is brief and plot-driven, but he's not afraid to linger on macabre and vivid details, such as a rosary clenched in a plane crash victim's hand, or hard-learned lessons from a sniper's life (pack your food so you can find it at night, by touch). These small but memorable -- indeed, almost cinematic -- details give his books another layer that distinguishes them from the average potboiler.
Although the author has occasionally departed from his usual fare (examples include the tenderhearted coming-of-age tale Wish You Well and the holiday-themed adventure The Christmas Train), it is high-octane thrillers that are his true stock in trade. Whether it's a taut stand-alone or a new installment in his Camel Club series, readers know when they crack the spine of a new Baldacci book, they're in for an action-packed page-turner.
.Baldacci was a trial lawyer and a corporate lawyer for nine years in Washington, D.C.
He worked his way through college as a Pinkerton security guard and by washing and detailing 18-wheel trucks.
Baldacci writes under his own name except when published in Italy, where he uses a pseudonym because it is the homeland of his ancestors.
Bill Clinton selected The Simple Truth as his favorite novel of 1998, according to Baldacci's web site.
Sidney Archer has the world. A husband she loves. A job at which she excels, and a cherished young daughter. Then, as a plane plummets into the Virginia countryside, everything changes. And suddenly there is no one whom Sidney Archer can trust. Jason Archer is a rising young executive at Triton Global, the world's leading technology conglomerate. Determined to give his family the best of everything, Archer has secretly entered into a deadly game of cat and mouse. He is about to disappear - leaving behind a wife who must sort out his lies from his truths, an aircrash investigation team that wants to know why the plane he was ticketed on suddenly fell from the sky, and a veteran FBI agent who wants to know it all. From Seattle to Washington, D.C., from New Orleans to Maine, the hunt for Jason Archer follows a trail as complex as the world he lived and worked in - a world of enormously powerful computers, a multimillion-dollar takeover deal, titanic financial standoffs, artificial intelligence, and the Internet. With brilliant minds colliding, ruthless men waging battles of intimidation, rainmakers going toe-to-toe with killers, and security specialists making a fortune trying to plug the holes, the startling truth behind Jason Archer's disappearance explodes into a sinister plot with the murder of the country's single most powerful individual. And soon Archer's wife, Sidney, aided by the relentless and sharp-eyed FBI agent Lee Sawyer, will plunge straight into the violence that is leaving behind a trail of dead bodies and shocking, exposed secrets...
With sales of his first novel, Absolute Power (LJ 11/15/95), topping 300,000 copies and a movie version scheduled for release in spring 1997, Baldacci is living high on the hog. In this second effort, a woman seeks the truth about her husband's death in a plane crash.
Number of Reviews: 19
Average Rating:
![]()
Write a Review
Was pretty good
Reuss, an avid reader, 04/20/2008
The book was filled with twists. A good plot with many sub plots, typical Baldacci. However the ending left me a bit bitter. The ending could have been so much better. I also think the books main character was a bit to bold. She was to strong of a character regardless of the situations she faced in the book. Baldacci's other works are bit better in this regard thankfully. Good stuff except the last 100 pages or so
Also recommended: Vince Flynn, Patterson, Woods
Cleverly written but a tad to much?
RC, professional, 04/20/2008
My third book from Baldacci and it was quite the novel. The book is cleverly written but just a little overboard on the heroics of the main character. Sidney - the dainty housewife, mother and part time attorney who doubles as Rambo is a little to much for me to grasp. I believe alot of the scenarios in the book while plausible are a bit to over the top. She is fearless. The other problem with the book I had is. It is just to long. This is a constant issue with many other Baldacci fans - He overwrites. This book definitely has that problem. The paperback was at 700 pages. I would say 100-150 pages of useless banter under the delete key would have made this a better book. I still think he is a great writer. I have decided to read a few more of his since he is quite good at what he does. I can get past the over writing issue I just hope the next book I read the main character is not a super hero like Sidney. If you are looking for a talented writer in this genre you may not need not look any further. He will fit the bill. I have recommended him to several folks and they are all impressed for the most part.
Also recommended: Ridley Pearson - Michael Connelly - Vince Flynn are tops in my book. Baldacci is in the top 7 of my favorite writers but no one tops the 3 above in my opinion.
Too complicated
A reviewer, a reader of many genres, 01/28/2008
Total Control is not the edge of your seat page turner that Absolute Power is. The ending is too far fetched. Even after reading the end twice, I'm not sure who did what to whom and why. Sydney is a female Rambo but not a very convincing one. Pass on this one unless you have a long plane flight and you picked up the paperback at a discount.
Also recommended: Absolute Power, Dennis LeHane , Vince Flynn
Extremely Outstanding !!
Scarlett, A reviewer, 03/29/2007
I am an avid reader -- Total Control was truly an edge of your seat book AND although it was offering a lot of characters you had to tie together -- it was well done and easy to follow. One reviewer said it was a little un-realistic -- which I believe can be said of MOST fiction with a 'hero' or 'heroine' !! I think Baldacci is RIGHT UP THERE with the other greats -- with possibly the exception of Sidney Sheldon.
Great, edge-of-your-seat thrill ride
A reviewer, A reviewer, 01/01/2006
Fast-paced page turner. While some of it was a little far-fetched, this IS a fictional thriller. Of Baldacci's books, I've read this and Last Man Standing. I enjoyed this book thoroughly - Last Man Standing had a very disappointing climax. Definitely a Baldacci fan!
Showing 1-5 NextQ: What's one thing you've done that you are glad you did but happier that you will never have to do again?
A: Taken and passed the Virginia Bar Exam.
Q: How do you indulge your appetite? Caviar? Burgers and fries?
A: Pasta. I am definitely not a caviar person.
Q: Are you a righty or lefty?
A: Righty.
Q: What's your favorite cartoon?
A: "The Tick."
Q: Do you have a favorite day of the year?
A: The day after I've finished a novel.
Q: Will you identify a specific historic event or image that has been especially defining of American culture?
A: Lincoln's assassination. Reconstruction, Jim Crowism, segregation, and discrimination were all, unfortunately, enhanced with his murder.
David Baldacci: I love writing, and earning your living doing something you love is wonderful.
David Baldacci: It will be out the early part of 1998.
David Baldacci: Think about why you want to be a writer. If you decide you really like to write, then spend a lot of time learning the craft, and read a lot of good authors.
David Baldacci: If you mean ABSOLUTE POWER, I wasn't anticipating a movie, I was just hoping to get the book published. But I did think Eastwood was a good choice.
David Baldacci: I knew it would be different -- adapting a book to film is very difficult. A number of things have to be cut. Trying to compare the book and the movie really isn't fair because they are such different mediums. I like the book better!
David Baldacci: I work at home so I have to share the computer with my three-year-old daughter.
David Baldacci: A lot is simply imagination, but I do take characteristics of people I know and blend them into characters in the book. The president in ABSOLUTE POWER is not Bill Clinton.
David Baldacci: Thank you!
David Baldacci: Fantasy can be a broad genre. I won't rule it out, I have a lot of interests.
David Baldacci: I was a trial lawyer for five years, and then I did corporate work for about four years.
David Baldacci: John Irving, Ann Tyler, John Updike, Garrison Keillor, Mark Twain.
David Baldacci: It's certainly a possibility. I liked her character a lot, as well as that of Lee Sawyer, so they may appear in future books.
David Baldacci: Thank you very much -- it's a pleasure for me, too!
David Baldacci: He and I know each other, and whenever I'm in Charlottesville I look him up. He's a very nice man.
David Baldacci: My next book is done. It's entitled THE WINNER. I could tell you about it, but then I'd have to...you know the rest.
David Baldacci: Roughly 16 months to two years.
David Baldacci: He won't be in the next book, but he may appear in the future. I really like him.
David Baldacci: There is great pressure on bestselling authors to turn product out. I'm not sure that anyone can maintain high quality at that sort of pace. If it takes me four years to write my next book, then that's what it takes.
David Baldacci: I thought the cast was great, and I thought the adaptation was great. If you forgot the book and considered it only a movie, then it was very entertaining.
David Baldacci: There was one reason for that...and his name is Clint Eastwood. As soon as he signed, I knew the story would build around his character. So, I missed Jack Graham a lot, but I wasn't surprised.
David Baldacci: I think it's both exciting and frightening...as are all new technologies. The upside is terrific, but there are downsides. I enjoy these chats, but I really prefer to meet people face to face. I guess I'm old-fashioned.
David Baldacci: I would agree, but I would add -- make sure you're writing for the right reasons. Then you'll be more likely to finish that book.
David Baldacci: I enjoy music while I'm writing. Everything from classical to Alanis Morissette.
David Baldacci: I grew up with very strong female role models, thus I enjoy writing about women with those characteristics. I don't write about damsels in distress, because I don't know any. My wife is a great sounding board for the female characters.
David Baldacci: I read a lot of books in the thriller genre. I had polished ABSOLUTE POWER to the point where I thought it comparable to the others I had read. As a writer, you run the risk of wanting to edit something forever. But at some point you have to let go.
David Baldacci: It would be impossible to compare them, they're both challenging, and can be very rewarding. My preference is for writing, but I do not regret practicing law.
David Baldacci: I thought it was important that the reader see everything through the burglar's eyes. In that way I was able to get the reader to participate in the story. With that look, chances are they'll enjoy the book a lot more.
David Baldacci: Yes, I was a partner in a firm in Washington. I had been writing for nine years before ABSOLUTE POWER was published. I had been writing for years from ten at night until three in the morning, and working at the same time.
David Baldacci: I was a poli sci major in college, very interested in politics and power. As a lawyer in Washington I got a good dose of it, and I enjoy writing about it.
David Baldacci: Thank you very much; it's good to be an inspiration!
David Baldacci: I do my own research, and I have a person who gathers information for me on some subjects. She's very talented and very hardworking.
David Baldacci: It will probably be spring of 1998.
David Baldacci: I write on and off all during the day. I don't have a set schedule, but I work every day. When I'm not writing, I'm thinking about it.
David Baldacci: I'm trying [laughter]. Sometimes it's not so easy, but I'm not complaining.
David Baldacci: I still have a lot of respect for lawyers and how hard they work. I think the public's perceptions of lawyers is somewhat skewed; they really don't know that much about them or what they do.
David Baldacci: I don't really write courtroom dramas. However, some of the trial strategies were based on personal experiences.
David Baldacci: I've always had a great fear of the slippery slope, so censorship is not something I think is good.
David Baldacci: "The Rockford Files"!
David Baldacci: I am married, and I have two children.
David Baldacci: You may see something other than thrillers down the road. I have a lot of different interests, and there's a lot I want to write about.
David Baldacci: I went to college at VCU, and I went to law school at the University of Virginia.
David Baldacci: I do not use a software product for novels; for screenplays I use a product called Final Draft.
David Baldacci: No. Although she certainly helps with my novels. She has the world's hardest job -- Mom.
David Baldacci: There are about one million lawyers in the U.S. -- in sheer numbers there are probably too many. But if you have a passion for the profession, that shouldn't stop you.
David Baldacci: I didn't. William Goldman did, and I think Bill did a fine job.
David Baldacci: My mother and father. They have a very strong work ethic; they're very honest.
David Baldacci: A very fair comment!
David Baldacci: Yes, I was. With Ed Harris, Clint Eastwood -- had a great time.
David Baldacci: Bill Goldman is a two-time Oscar winning screenwriter -- he didn't need me to guide him at all.
David Baldacci: Me too.
David Baldacci: Losing privacy, yes. And losing personal identities.
David Baldacci: Eighteen. Because at that age they can read anything regardless of what you tell them.
David Baldacci: One can only hope.
David Baldacci: First, I have to come up with a plot that...1) is sustainable as a novel, and...2) is something I'm interested in enough to commit so much time and energy to.
David Baldacci: You have to develop interesting characters -- obviously. Motivations oftentimes are dictated by goals and what values you give the characters.
David Baldacci: Not if you love what you're doing!
David Baldacci: I thank everyone for participating, I enjoyed the questions. Best wishes!
Total Control opens with an immediate shocker: A plane from Washington bound for Los Angeles explodes and plummets to earth just moments after takeoff. Until the crash, Washington attorney Sidney Archer seemed to have everything going for her: a loving husband, a thriving career, a beautiful daughter. But then her husband Jason's name turns up on the passenger list of the doomed Flight 3223. The FBI seems to think Jason might have been responsible for the crash and not on the plane at all. And then the lies start emerging.
In the hopes of giving his family everything he felt they deserved, Jason Archer entered into a deadly game of cat and mouse, secretly doing business with some extremely dangerous people. Now this high-tech world of hostile takeovers, artificial intelligence, and corporate espionage has forced him to disappear. In an effort to clear Jason's name and recover the family the plane crash destroyed, Sidney, with the help of FBI agent Lee Sawyer, plunges into the center of her husband's secret life, uncovering a sinister plot involving the murder of the country's most powerful individual, and putting her own life and that of her young daughter at stake.
This gripping page-turner, which vividly depicts the dark heart of the country's political and business affairs, proves again that David Baldacci is among the brightest new lights in the thriller scene.
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