Run Away (Grand Central Publishing,
2019) is the most recent thriller from Harlan Coben, whose Myron Bolitar series
was a fixture on the 1990s amateur sleuth lists. With the new century Coben has
turned to elaborately plotted stand-alone thrillers; his latest has more twists
and hairpin turns than two or three roller coasters combined.
Simon
Greene, a successful financial manager in metropolitan New York City, does not
know where he went wrong. His oldest daughter Paige seemed fine until she
started college. There, she got in with the wrong crowd, started taking drugs,
and disappeared. He’s never given up looking for her. His neighbor tells Simon
he thinks he saw Paige in New York’s Central Park. Simon finds her but her
boyfriend keeps him from taking her home. Paige disappears during the fracas
that follows, and shortly thereafter the confrontation between Simon and the boyfriend,
filmed by tourists in the park, goes viral on the internet, creating a legal
and PR nightmare for Simon.
Simon and
his wife Ingrid start searching for Paige on their own, naively looking for her
drug dealer in his lair in a confrontation that anyone should know wouldn’t go
particularly well. Interwoven with this thread are descriptions of the
activities of a pair of paid assassins that go to great lengths to ensure each
kill cannot be linked to any of the others. They are being tracked by a
determined private investigator named Elena Ramirez, who is trying to figure
out what the pattern is in their choice of targets to protect potential future
victims. Eventually both story lines merge but it takes awhile.
After a
comparatively slow start that sets the stage for the story, the action never
stops, galloping headlong until the very last paragraph. There are some great
secondary characters, such as Cornelius, the owner of the apartment house where
Paige lived. Devoted fans of the Myron Bolitar series will catch the indirect
reference to Bolitar’s friend Windsor
Horne Lockwood III early in the book.
Starred
review from Library Journal.
·
Hardcover: 384 pages
·
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing; First Edition
(March 19, 2019)
·
Language: English
·
ISBN-10: 1538748460
·
ISBN-13: 978-1538748466
Aubrey Hamilton ©2019
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on
Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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