Title: Backfire
(FBI Thriller Series #16)
Author: Catherine Coulter
Genre: Mystery, Thriller, Crime
First published: July 10th 2012
Finished reading: April 2nd 2015
Pages: 480
“You’re going to live. That’s not to say you’re going to be happy for a while, but it beats the alternative.”
I was in the mood for a crime read last week and since Backfire has been on my TBR shelf for a while now, I decided to give this novel by Catherine Coulter a go. This one is actually the sixteenth book in the FBI Thriller series, but now I’ve read it I don’t think it is absolutely necessary to read them all in order. Sure, some of the background details of the main characters were missing, but it was still easy enough to pick up the story. The pace is fast and there is a lot going on at the same time. The prose is easy to read, although the romance scenes were a bit on the cheesy side for my taste. Some of the scenes weren’t completely believable either, especially when it comes to the actions of the bad guys… All in all not the perfect crime read I was looking for, but still good enough for a few hours of easy entertainment.
FBI agents and couple Lacy Sherlock and Dillon Savich have been asked to travel to San Francisco when their friend Judge Ramsey Hunt is shot. They suspect it has something to do with the case Ramsey was currently working on involving the couple Clive and Cindy Cahill… The two have been accused of murder and spionage, and federal prosecutor Mickey O’Rourke has been acting strange as well the day the judge was shot. It soon turns out something is off as O’Rourke seems to have disappeared without a trace the next day… And Sherlock and Savich suspect there is something bigger going on behind the whole shooting. Does it have anything to do with the secret information the Cahill couple has stolen? The CIA isn’t helping either, and things soon get more complicated as the shooter doesn’t seem to want to give up until the judge is actually dead. Will they be able to find the shooter on time? And what about the strange note that was delivered to Savich before they heard about the shooting?
I’m not sure if I will end up reading more of this series at some point, although I do know that if I will see one of them on sale I will probably end up buying it. Catherine Coulter writes in a way that is easy to read and while not all scenes are totally believable, the story is entertaining in general. Backfire is not the perfect read, but good enough for a few hours of easy reading on the beach or curled up in a chair with a cup of steaming coffee.
I haven’t read a book from the crime genre in ages and this sounds like a fun quick read. Maybe I need something like this to get me out of my reading slump…
I nominated you for the Creative Blogger Award by the way.. 🙂 But no pressure – if you don’t want to do it you don’t have to. 🙂
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It’s definitely an easy read that doesn’t require a lot of thinking… Perfect for a few hours of entertaining and it might even help you getting out of your reading slump.
And thank you for the nomination! I really appreciate it! 😀
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I read the first 4-5 books in this series, but then for some reason stopped. I liked Sherlock and Savich, but I think the stories started becoming kind “been there, done that.” for me.
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I can understand where you are going with that; the chemistry between Sherlock and Savich make the novels interesting, but if the plot is roughly the same it does get boring… I haven’t read the books in order though; I jumped right to number 16 haha. I might still read the first at some point to see what originally happened to judge Ramsey’s daughter Emma.
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Sometimes a book that fills a couple of hours is exactly what you need. Thanks for sharing this one, I hadn’t come across this author before.
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I totally agree! This novel works perfectly as a quick and entertaining read…
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