
Deadline Man
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

A business columnist for a big-city paper has a routine interview, gathering information on a company before deadline approaches. When the subject turns up dead, his reporting instincts kick in. Malcolm Hillgartner's narration is fine for the voices involved--those of assorted villains, newsroom colleagues, and an impressive array of girlfriends. And when the unnamed columnist tries to understand why he's being pursued, the narration really adds to the tension as Hillgartner's tone and pitch rise with the heightened emotions. The columnist relentlessly digs for the truth, all the while giving the reader an accurate description of a present-day newsroom. Both Hillgartner and the no-name protagonist get listeners' hearts racing. M.B. (c) AudioFile 2011, Portland, Maine

March 8, 2010
Talton (The Pain Nurse
) brings his journalism expertise to this fine mystery narrated by an unnamed columnist for a Seattle newspaper. Shortly after “the columnist” has a routine meeting with sometime source and heavy-hitting hedge fund manager Troy Hardesty at the man's downtown office, Troy falls 20 stories to his death on the street below. Back at the columnist's office, the paper's managers announce the company will be sold or closed in 60 days. Despite the uproar, the columnist is more concerned with juggling his three lovers than his future—until he's accosted by a streetwalker who shouts,“Eleven-eleven!” Later, sinister men claiming to be “federal officers” ask the columnist what Troy told him at their meeting. The columnist joins forces with Amber Burke, a cub reporter who wants to prove herself with a big story, in an effort to find out what's really going on. Well-rounded characters and a lightning-paced plot raise this well above the average global conspiracy story.
دیدگاه کاربران