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New York Times– bestselling author Stuart Woods returns with another page-turning thriller.President Will Lee is having a rough week. His vice president just died during surgery. Confirmation hearings for the new vice president are under way, but the squeaky-clean governor whom Will has nominated may have a few previously unnoticed skeletons in his closet. And Teddy Fay, the rogue CIA agent last seen in Shoot Him If He Runs, is plotting his revenge on CIA director Kate Rule Lee—the president’s wife.Plus there are some loose nukes in Pakistan that might just trigger World War III if Will’s diplomatic efforts fall short. It’s up to President Lee—with some help from Holly Barker, Lance Cabot, and a few other Stuart Woods series regulars—to save the world, and the upcoming election.
In bestseller Woods's uninspired sixth Will Lee thriller (after Capital Crimes), the incumbent U.S. president, William Jefferson Lee, faces a series of crises in an election year: his vice president has died during surgery; a nuclear warhead is missing in Pakistan and believed to be in the hands of a terrorist group possibly connected to al-Qaeda; and an independent presidential candidate, a charismatic minister, has erased Lee's once significant lead in the polls. To make matters worse, Lee's newly appointed vice president, the former governor of California, has got himself entangled in a messy divorce as well as a sordid love triangle that, if exposed, could become front-page fodder for the tabloids and all but destroy Lee's re-election bid. While Woods exhibits his usual brilliant sense of pacing, two-dimensional characters, a mechanical plot and an improbable ending far from satisfy. (Jan.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. More Reviews and RecommendationsWith several successful mystery series going at once -- the most popular featuring jet-setting cop-turned-lawyer Stone Barrington -- Stuart Woods more than manages to keep focused on a bestselling streak that shows no signs of slowing down.
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September 21, 2009: Should have been much better, actually. I knew it was going to be pretty bad when in the first sentence of the book, you meet William Jefferson Lee IV. Woods may have been thinking about an actual president, because the name of his fictional president is William Henry Lee IV. Woods has written an entire book, Chiefs, where the two main characters were William Henry Lee, Jr. and William Henry Lee IV. How he missed this exscapes me. But it's become somewhat routine in his books on the Lees to have some mistakes. By the time Will Lee is running for president, if you do the math you realize that Woods has de-aged Billy and Patricia Lee, Will's parents, by at least ten years.
This book, however, isn't really terrible. It just doesn't strike you as one thing or another. It's like an outline for a book that never materialized. Woods wrote my favorite book of all time, "Chiefs", and has written at least two really good follow-ups, "Grass Roots" and "Run Before The Wind." Maybe instead of chucking out several books a year, he should concentrate on one book at a time. Seems to have worked really well for Pat Conroy and Dan Brown.I Also Recommend: Chiefs (Will Lee Series #1).
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August 10, 2009: I have enjoyed most of Stuart Woods' books. This one was alright. I didn't see any purpose in the Pakistan/Nuke storyline. It was just thrown in there. The other storylines were good, with a very quick ending. Overall, just OK. --K--