Saving Sophie

Ronald H. Balson

Book - 2015

"Jack Sommers was just an ordinary accountant from Chicago-that is, until his wife passed away, his young daughter was kidnapped, and he became the main suspect in an $88 million dollar embezzlement case. Now Jack is on the run, hoping to avoid the feds long enough to rescue his daughter, Sophie, from her maternal grandfather, a suspected terrorist in Palestine. With the help of investigative team Liam and Catherine, and a new CIA operative, a secret mission is launched to not only rescue Sophie but also to thwart a major terrorist attack in Hebron. But will being caught in the crossfires of the Palestine-Israeli conflict keep their team from accomplishing the task at hand, or can they overcome the odds and save countless lives, includ...ing their own?"--

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Subjects
Genres
Suspense fiction
Published
New York : St. Martin's Griffin 2015.
Language
English
Main Author
Ronald H. Balson (-)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
424 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781250081292
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In Balson's solid sequel to Once We Were Brothers, Chicago PI Liam Taggart and his fiancée, lawyer Catherine Lockhart, investigate an act of embezzlement complicated by links to a child kidnapping and terrorist activity in Hebron, Israel. Jewish accountant Jack Sommers, who's hiding in Hawaii after helping misdirect an $88 million business transaction, is desperate to retrieve his six-year-old daughter, Sophie, from his late wife's Palestinian father, Dr. Arif al-Zahani. FBI agent Jeff Miller and Kayla Cummings, who advises the assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern Affairs, join the investigation, because they believe the missing money could be funding an extremist group led by al-Zahani. Suspense fans will find few surprises in a novel that focuses on showing how the everyday people of both Israel and Palestine just want to live quiet, peaceful lives. Balson succeeds in illuminating the personal side of the Middle Eastern conflict through his deeply human, psychologically credible characters. Agent: Maura Teitelbaum, May Miller. (Sept.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A Chicago lawyer resorts to embezzlement and negotiation with terrorists after his daughter is kidnapped. When Jack Sommers, a partner with the prestigious Chicago law firm Jenkins Fairchild, marries concert pianist Alina against the wishes of her father, Arif al-Zahani, a prominent Palestinian physician, intolerant in-laws will soon be the least of his problems. After visiting her mother in Hebron, Alina returns to Chicago and shortly thereafter dies of a sudden illness; Alina's parents sue Sommers for custody of their sole grandchild, 6-year-old Sophie, in whom up to this point al-Zahani has shown no interest. They lose the custody battle but win visitation rights, and it appears that reconciliation is in the offingthen Sophie disappears. Sommers, head counsel on a deal to sell a client's company, Kelsen Manufacturing, for $300 million, diverts $88 million of funds owed to the company's owner , then escapes incognito to Hawaii to await word from the shadowy miscreants who have promised to help him ransom Sophie with the misappropriated millions. Meanwhile, Sophie is being raised as a Muslim in al-Zahani's home while the good doctor, who moonlights as the head of a Palestinian splinter group, the Sons of Canaan, plans a massive terror attack on Israel. It soon becomes clear, not as gradually as a truly suspenseful thriller requires, that the attack will involve germ warfare. It's also clear early on that Dr. al-Zahani has no intention of returning Sophie for any price. While suing Jenkins et al. for malpractice, Kelsen seems to have traded manufacturing for fixing NCAA basketball games with the help of Russian mobsters. Is there a vast conspiracy afoot that has nothing to do with the peace process, the Russian underworld, or any of the other massive red herrings swimming ponderously by? After wading through lengthy chunks of superfluous background exposition, including trial and deposition transcripts, readers may not care how the puzzle is ultimately resolved. Complex where it should be simple and vice versa. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.