Friday, 26 April 2019

Review: The Fallen

The Fallen The Fallen by David Baldacci
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Amos Decker and his journalist friend Alex Jamison are visiting the home of Alex's sister in Barronville, a small town in western Pennsylvania that has been hit hard economically. When Decker is out on the rear deck of the house talking with Alex's niece, a precocious eight-year-old, he notices flickering lights and then a spark of flame in the window of the house across the way. When he goes to investigate he finds two dead bodies inside and it's not clear how either man died. But this is only the tip of the iceberg. There's something going on in Barronville that might be the canary in the coal mine for the rest of the country.

Faced with a stonewalling local police force, and roadblocks put up by unseen forces, Decker and Jamison must pull out all the stops to solve the case. And even Decker's infallible memory may not be enough to save them.


This might not be one of Baldacci's best books (there are some scathing reviews on Goodreads) but I still found it enjoyable and easy to read. Maybe because I'm not a reading snob plus I don't know how accurate his descriptions are, particularly relating to the opioid drug situation in the US and how towns have been affected by the closure of industries.

His facts may be totally wrong for all I know but that didn't affect my enjoyment of essentially a crime thriller.

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