“Outstanding—starts with a bang and gets tenser and tenser. Say Nothing shows Parks is a quality writer at the top of his form.”—Lee Child“Terrific book. Truly terrific. Tension throughout and tears at the end.”—Sue Grafton Judge Scott Sampson doesn’t brag about having a perfect life, but the evidence is clear: A prestigious job. A loving marriage. A pair of healthy children. Then a phone call … pair of healthy children. Then a phone call begins every parent’s most chilling nightmare. Scott’s six-year-old twins, Sam and Emma, have been taken. The judge must rule exactly as instructed in a drug case he is about to hear. If he refuses, the consequences for the children will be dire.
For Scott and his wife, Alison, the kidnapper’s call is only the beginning of a twisting, gut-churning ordeal of blackmail, deceit, and terror. Through it all, they will stop at nothing to get their children back, no matter the cost to themselves…or to each other.
“Complications and twists build to an unexpected climax that is both perfect and gut-wrenching.”—Library Journal (starred review)
“Grips the reader from the get-go and doesn’t let up until the final twist.”—Associated Press
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A good thrill book, not a great one, yet, it’s good enough for me. However, it seems that lately, I have become cautious in selecting my tension books, so it’s hard to get five stars out of me.
This book is all about a bourgeois judge whose two small children are kidnapped (right at the beginning of the book – well I admit, I was surprised) and he has to follow a few instructions To win them back at his position. Not a typical thriller. There are no suspects here, and this works just fine by me. It’s a positive approach because the book focuses on the judge and what he needs to go through.
It’s a well-written book that can fill a few hours of your day.
Loved the book. Wish there were more books like this one.
Very, very good.
Excellent book. Unexpected ending.
Well written, good plot and characters
great read!!
WHOA! I wasn’t sure I’d be able to read this one – I have a tendency to avoid books about danger or damage to children, especially toddlers. I was sent the widget as a courtesy after agreeing to post a promotional piece about the book on my blog, and was not sure I’d actually read it. I wasn’t familiar with Brad Parks beyond his name and reputation for legal thrillers – another category I don’t tend toward, since I am a lawyer. But I thought I’d give it a look nevertheless, since the idea of the unbelievable “choice” facing Judge Sampson repeatedly teased at the corners of my mind despite myself.
Parks writes what I have come to think of as a standard best-selling legal thriller. That’s not a slam or complaint. There’s a bit of a formula that (to my mind) Scott Turow started years ago – the components include just-this-side-of-Everyman characters, wild twists and turns, just enough legal jargon to make the book feel authentic without so much that it loses anyone in the details, and solid and engaging (almost conversational) writing. Those are all good things – and if every successful legal thriller follows that formula, that’s because it’s a formula that works. But make no mistake, it can’t be an easy formula to follow – most notably, I think, because of that last element, but also because of the second item I listed. There are so many books in this genre now, that it must be getting exceedingly more difficult to keep coming up with twists that feel original (or at least, original in their context and details) and surprising… And of course, writing in a strong, clear, concise, entertaining voice has always been much harder than it sounds. So formulaic concept aside, there is still a LOT of skill involved in crafting books like this one, and authors like Parks (or old-school Turow) deserve credit for not only doing it, but doing it repeatedly.
I’m glad I gave the book a chance. It’s well-written and engaging – and absolutely horrifying. Our families are often our sources of greatest strength – and also, of course, our most profound weakness. The stark nature of every parent’s worst nightmare – having their children taken – was devastating to read, as was the spiraling paranoia that I can only imagine inevitably follows in such a scenario. I found myself shouting out loud at the empty room and groaning in frustration repeatedly during the course of reading. I couldn’t stop thinking about what I would do in such a horridly unwinnable set of circumstances. And I couldn’t stop turning pages…
My review copy was provided by NetGalley.