Judas horse: an FBI special agent Ana Grey mystery
β Scribed by April Smith
- Publisher
- Random House of Canada;Alfred A. Knopf
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 191 KB
- Edition
- 1st ed
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN
- 1299106420
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. At the start of Smith's superb third thriller to feature Ana Grey (after 2003's Good Morning, Killer), the FBI special agent, who's still recovering from post-traumatic stress disorder after shooting a crazed detective on a suicide mission seven months earlier, learns that the skeletal remains of her missing onetime fiancΓ©, fellow special agent Steve Crawford, have turned up in Oregon's Cascade Mountains. Ana later finds out Steve was murdered by members of an anarchist group with a penchant for homemade bombs. After training at the FBI's undercover school, Ana uses an alias to penetrate the group, which includes a former FBI agent gone bad, Dan Stone. As Allfather Stone plots a terrorist act he calls the Big One, Ana must burrow through layers of paranoia to discover the precise threat the FBI is dealing with. Ana's nuanced and coolly observational narrative voice perfectly complements the well-paced action, which builds to a satisfying conclusion that leaves open the next chapter of Ana's story. 5-city author tour. (Feb.)
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Review
βA genuinely scarifying thriller with a consistently vertiginous, through the looking glass mood. Every character is a hologram of sorts and every episode has the momentum of a theme-park ride. One of Smithβs cleverest tricks here is her unsettling depiction of unlikely alliances: Ana turns out to have more in common with the villain, Stone, than she might ever have imagined.β
β_Los Angeles Times
_βA feverishly pitched adventure . . . With every dynamic scene, including a wild mustang roundup that thunders right off the page, the reader, like Ana, is reminded of the lost ideals and divided loyalties that make these mortal conflicts so bloodyβand so sad.β
βMarilyn Stasio, _New York Times Book Review
_
βWhy does the FBI still seem so sexy? Part of the reason is murder mysteries like April Smithβs Judas Horse . . . Itβs creepy, chest-thumping stuff, with snitches and loyalty tests and the good guys and villains constantly in flux.β
β_Los Angeles Magazine
_βA runaway but cagey novel that never lets up . . . The incidents with which Ana must deal [at FBI undercover school] are so fast, harrowing, and breathtaking that they are like skiing down the expert slope while juggling vials of nitroglycerine.β
βOtto Penzler, _New York Sun
_
βSmithβs superb third thriller to feature Ana Grey . . . Anaβs nuanced and coolly observational narrative voice perfectly complements the well-paced action, which builds to a satisfying conclusion that leaves open the next chapter of Anaβs story.β
β_Publishers Weekly _(starred)
_
_βSmith does a convincing job of conveying the trials of maintaining a dual identity . . . The narrative is fast-paced without becoming frantic, and the intertwining story lines are deftly handled. Highly recommended.β
**β**Library Journal (starred)
βA demonic ride through undercover terrain . . . Smith creates an undercover training regime for Ana that the FBI might do well to emulate. Sheβs so expert at implanting stress that you could become bipolar just from reading one chapter. Feisty, disturbing and exceptionally well done.β
_ βKirkus Reviews _(starred)
β¦ Subjects
An FBI Special Agent Ana Grey Mystery
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