Vanishing Act
Jane Whitefield Series, Book 1
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- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
January 2, 1995
Perry's sixth novel (after Sleeping Dogs) is a taut thriller that at times reads like an extended, though flawed, character study of its heroine. Jane Whitefield, half-white, half-Indian member of the Seneca Wolf clan, helps people disappear-people like Rhonda Eckerly, fleeing her abusive husband, or Harry Kemple, hoping to stay alive after witnessing a gangland shooting. Like a one-woman witness protection program, Jane has helped both vanish by giving them new identities and new starts at life. Now an alleged new victim has invaded Jane's upstate New York house: John Felker claims that he's a cop-turned-accountant, is being framed as an embezzler and has a contract out on his life. Almost immediately, the men chasing Felker appear, and Jane leads him farther upstate, to a Canadian Indian reservation where he can build a new life. Jane is an original and fascinating creation. Like Andrew Vachss's series hero, Burke, she operates outside the law, but with a particular slant born of her distinct character and Seneca heritage. Perry tells her story in a trim and brisk manner, moreover, with plenty of action and suspense. It takes Jane far longer than it will most readers to figure out that Felker is other than what he says, however, and while her trusting nature, which borders on gullibility, generates tension, it doesn't mesh with her hard-boiled profession and hunter-like wiles. It's only when the truth behind Felker is revealed, and Jane acts decisively on it, that most readers will regain the respect they've lost for this otherwise likable and unusually intriguing heroine.
Thomas Perry's first Jane Whitefield adventure (1996) is back in circulation, and it's still a humdinger, thanks to narrator Joyce Bean. Whitefield provides those who need it a sort of privatized government protection program. When someone who is deserving needs to vanish (for example, a battered wife), Whitefield provides the escape and deep cover. However, when one of her former clients and one of her abettors is murdered, Jane's world begins to spin out of control. She uses logic and Indian lore (she is full-blooded Native American) to solve a complicated scenario that's marked by revenge, betrayal, and brutality. Bean's performance is an act that's hard to follow. She's highly believable as Whitefield and modulates the story's emotional ups and downs easily. She's especially good at male voices. This production makes one glad that Perry's first novel itself hasn't vanished. A.L.H. (c) AudioFile 2009, Portland, Maine
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