Some others since I've reviewed too many Grishams.
I've noticed a disturbing trend from most authors that I read more than once. Grisham. Patterson(and accomplices). King.
Coben. Sanford. Every single one of them slips in some anti-Trump rhetoric at some point. I'm getting fucking tired of it.
Hidden Pictures
Pretty decent read about a troubled recovering drug addict who encounters some creepy shit when she takes a job as a house-sitter fresh out of rehab.
Enjoyed it because I didn't anticipate it playing out as it did. And it was pretty anti-woke, actually. That was refreshing. Correctly identified who the real monsters are.
Could have used a little polish and a tad more exposition regarding the main character, but it was a better book than I anticipated.
Dear Child
German book about a kidnapped child.
Nothing in this book went the way I thought it would. It was a little hard to work through because it was written in three voices. It also had some German references that don't really resonate which added to the difficulty.
This was another book that zigged when I thought it would zag, which I appreciated. I didn't really buy the final reveal, but other than that it was a pretty decent read.
The Investigator
John Sanford has probably run out the string with his Lucas Davenport 'Prey' series. So he branches out with the daughter Lettie and some of the other peripheral characters.
This is a Lettie Sanford story.
Like all Sanford books it's uneven in places, unrealistic in others.
It's basically a pulp read. Chew through it and immediately forget.
Escape
Patterson-named book that he didn't write. One of millions.
There are some good parts. I'm not a big fan of the main character (a recurring one from other books) Billy Harney.
It's not a terrible read, but of all the recurring character books I typically read (Jack Ryan, Mitch Rapp, Michael Bennett, Lucas Davenport, Virgin Flowers, Alex Cross, Jake Brigance, etc.) Harney is probably the least likeable.
All I really remember from this one is that Harney simultaneously solves a kidnapping and a gang-related case in one fortunate (and implausible) manner.
The Devil's Hand
Probably the least woke book I've read in a while. I'm nowhere near done, just barely started.
The basis of this book is that our enemy plays the long game. It watches us destroy ourselves after 9-11's patriotic fervor dissipates and bides its time. Watching, learning, adapting and planning the next attack.
It lays out what some of us have been saying for decades (and others here deny). The end game is domination on multiple fronts. Infiltrate the schools, compromise the politicians. Pick specific areas of the country and overwhelm them with sheer numbers -- knowing that we are not united (or intelligent) enough to stop it.
It all rings true to me. I see it every day.
Hooked me when there was a section where the islamic fundamentalists discussed 'a former vice president and his family who had been corrupted and compromised by eastern European oil interests.' Could have been Bush, could have been Biden. Either way, I get it.