The sixth man

David Baldacci

Book - 2011

After alleged serial killer Edgar Roy is apprehended and locked away in a psychiatric unit, private investigators Sean King and Michelle Maxwell are called in by Roy's lawyer--an old friend of Sean King--to look into the case. But en route to their first meeting with the lawyer, King and Maxwell discover his dead body.

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FICTION/Baldacci, David
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1st Floor FICTION/Baldacci, David Due Dec 30, 2024
Subjects
Published
New York : Grand Central Pub 2011.
Language
English
Main Author
David Baldacci (-)
Edition
1st ed
Item Description
Sequel to: First family.
Physical Description
415 p. ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780446573108
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

This should have been another rip-roaring Baldacci thriller. Sean King and Michelle Maxwell, the former Secret Service agents who have starred in four previous novels, are off to Maine, where Tom Bergin, Sean's former mentor and the lawyer for an accused serial killer, has asked them to look into the case. En route, they encounter a parked car with its four-ways flashing. Inside is Bergin's murdered body. Is his client, who's locked up in a supermax prison, somehow responsible? And, if so, why? This intriguing story is marred by uncharacteristically poor writing. Baldacci's characters tell each other things they should already know, for the benefit of the reader; dialogue is repeated, as though the author has forgotten he's already covered this ground (or he thinks we're too dim to remember the information); the characters are thin; and the dialogue is stilted. Like a rookie, Baldacci seems to think there's something wrong with the word said, leaving his characters to retort, reply, counter, and grouse (sometimes all on the same page). Fans will likely flock to the book because of Baldacci's track record, but fair warning: they might feel short-changed by his sloppy storytelling. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Can track record alone sell a bad book? Yes, when it's combined with a marketing budget of the kind that midlist authors dream about.--Pitt, David Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

At the outset of Baldacci's routine fifth thriller featuring ex-Secret Service agents Sean King and Michelle Maxwell (after First Family), the pair, who now work together as private investigators, fly to Maine to meet Ted Bergin, King's old law professor. Bergin has hired King and Maxwell to assist in his defense of Edgar Roy, a U.S. government employee who's been indicted for murdering six people found buried on Roy's Virginia farm. Because for some reason it's a federal case, Roy is incarcerated at a Maine prison. Near their destination, the PIs stop to investigate a broken-down car on the side of the road. Inside is Bergin, who's been shot between the eyes. King and Maxwell probe deeper into the charges against Roy to find the professor's killer, with no help from Roy, who hasn't been talking since his arrest. A fast pace compensates only in part for a cartoonish villain-a venal politician-and a familiar Washington conspiracy plot. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Something is rotten in the state of U.S. intelligence. Baldacci's fifth Sean King and Michelle Maxwell novel (after First Family) opens with the investigative duo headed to a federal prison for the criminally insane. Jailed there is Edgar Roy, an IRS employee, accused of killing six men and burying their bodies in his barn. Called in by Ted Bergin, King's old professor and Roy's lawyer, the two find their case quickly becoming personal when they discover Bergin shot to death in his car. Was Bergin killed because he was defending Roy? Did Roy murder those six men? The more questions King and Maxwell ask, the more lethal obstacles they face. Their questions begin to lead them into the most deadly places of all-the highest echelons of U.S. intelligence organizations. Baldacci builds a suspenseful story with appealing characters that will have the reader guessing their loyalties right to the very end. Verdict Highly recommended for all fans of Baldacci and similar authors like James Patterson and John Grisham. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 11/1/10.]-Susan O. Moritz, Montgomery Cty. P.L., MD (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

To keep al-Qaeda zealots, megalomaniac North Koreans with nukes and other bad guys at bay, gigabytes of real-time intelligence stream to the Wall, there to be collated and conceptualized by one man, the Analyst.The Analyst, once an anonymous IRS bureaucrat with an eidetic memory and a strangely powerful intellect, now sits mute in a federal supermax prison, an accused serial killer. Baldacci (First Family, 2009, etc.) drops Sean King and Michelle Maxwell, Secret Service agents turned private investigators, into the mess. King has agreed to investigate the murders at the behest of defense attorney Ted Bergin, his beloved mentor. On their way to meet Bergin at the prison in Maine, King and Maxwell happen upon Bergin sitting in his vehicle on an isolated road, emergency lights flashing, murdered. Baldacci's realistic plot blends patriotism and naked ambition, greed and paranoia and bureaucratic infighting. With the Wall providing a singular source of accurate information, the government's alphabet departments are losing funding, especially Homeland Security, the fiefdom of manipulatively ambitious Ellen Foster. Peter Bunting, chief of a private-security company, is the genius behind the Wall and the Analyst. Mason Quantrell, owner of a rival company, is more interested in fat contracts than useful intelligence. Then there are the Analyst's sister, Kelly Paul, a woman with her own secrets; James Harkes, an agent without a badge but with a propensity for unleashing violence; and finally, Edgar Roy, the Analyst, brilliant, shy, lonely and deeply troubled about his part in the death and destruction generated by the Wall. This novel is action-adventure, the plot ricocheting between isolated Maine woods and Washington power corridors, with stops in Virginia and New York. It's Baldacci's fifth book in a series featuring King and Maxwell, and one that further explores their complex and sometimes thorny relationship.Authentic scenario, mystery piled on misdirection and more double-crosses than a tic-tac-toe tournament.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.