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Easy Mix Book Review

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Live Wire by Harlan Coben

Harlan Coben owed me. Last year, in the wisdom of any publishing house sitting on a gold-mine of an author, Coben’s New Zealand publisher reissued his 20-year-old first novel, Play Dead, and sent review copies far and wide to get the publicity ball rolling.

Having read and enjoyed several of the New Jersey-based writer’s later works (particularly The Woods and Caught), I was all set for a rough-and-ready version of his polished recent thrillers. What I got was a confused, hyperkinetic pile of suspenseless mush, which was only redeemed by the delightfully apologetic foreword by Coben, who appears as conscious as anyone of how far he has come.

Naturally, I wanted him to make it up to me with a stonkingly clever, unpredictable and scintillating story, all the better if it contained razor-sharp one-liners and hermetic 80s glam-rock stars.

Who knew he would produce just that? What he has arrived with, in 2011, is perhaps his best production yet, not only in the near-flawless structure (the arcs, both character and plot, cry out for film adaptation), but also in tone, with the return of his stalwart protagonist and star of 10 of his 20 books to date, Myron Bolitar.

Bolitar, with his steel-trap mind and similarly unconquerable nerve, is like the brother-by-another-mother of Lee Child’s staunch hero Jack Reacher: both men are prone to bouts of fierce loyalty, though never to the point of foolishness, and skilled at finding creative ways out of trouble when their gift of the gab proves insufficient.

In Live Wire (the titular pun becomes amusingly apparent toward the end of the book), the set-up demands the best of Bolitar’s skills as a sports agent, friend, and investigator. A former tennis star, Suzze T, and her rock-star husband Lex Ryder (half of 80s duo Horse Power) are expecting a baby. Happy news, you would think, but when Suzze visits her former agent Bolitar, upset over an anonymous Facebook post questioning the baby’s paternity, it becomes clear that not everyone connected with the couple is thrilled by the prospective miracle of birth.

Bolitar’s loyalty reflex kicks in, leading him into the heart of one of the most gripping, cleverly paced and downright funny suspense stories I have read in many months.

Among the well-drawn cast that appears in the course of Bolitar’s probes are his sister-in-law Kitty, his nephew Mickey, his priapic and erstwhile business partner Win, assorted villains who find themselves uncomfortable recipients of Bolitar’s unique sense of justice, and two men conspicuous by their absence – Lex Ryder’s former musical partner, Gabriel Wire, who hasn’t been seen in public since the mystery-shrouded death of a young woman in his company many years ago, and Bolitar’s brother, from whom he has long been estranged.

It’s a rollicking story that in the hands of a lesser writer could swing right off its axis, but the Coben of Play Dead bears no likeness at all to today’s master.

I did wonder whether the satirical suspense writer Carl Hiaasen, should he read Live Wire, might object to the tonal similarities between this novel and the best of his own work, but I suspect like most readers he’ll be grinning too hard to care.

4 / 5 stars: Top contender for thrilling piss-take of the year. Click here to view more Easy Mix Book Reviews.


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