Long Lost by Harlan Coben
Myron Bolitar hasn't heard from Terese Collins since their torrid affair ended ten years ago, so her desperate phone call from Paris catches him completely off guard. In a shattering admission, Terese reveals the tragic story behind her disappearance - her struggles to get pregnant, the greatest moment of her life when her baby was born...and the fatal accident that robbed her of it all: her marriage, her happiness and her beloved only daughter.
Now a suspect in the murder of her ex-husband in Paris, Terese has nowhere else to turn for help. Myron is compelled to go to her. But then a startling piece of evidenceturns the entire case upside down, laying bare Terese's long-buried family secrets and the very real possibility that her daughter may still be alive.
Caught in a foreign landscape where nothing is as it seems, Myron must tear the city apart - and eventually the globe. He must fight for answers to unfathomable questions and, ultimately, uncover a sinister plot with shocking global implications.
I have waxed rhapsodic about this guy so many times, I almost bore myself. But here I go again.
From the very beginning, I was completely hooked into the novel, reeled in and bashed over the head with a stout rock. The skill Coben has is making the reader feel a kinship with his flawed hero. Not only is the prose snappy, witty and fluid, it is extremely thought-provoking. At least, it is for me, anyway.
I'm pondering a lot at the moment over my preference with genre and style and am leaning more towards this theory. The heroes that I enjoy reading about are flawed. They get things wrong, they have unusual emotional foibles, they are eccentric. However, they always do the right thing, regardless of the impact it has upon themselves. In a nutshell, these are the guys I aspire to be like. I fully appreciate that the reason I am what I am (Christ, I'm beginning to sound like Ethel bloody Merman!) stems largely from episodes in my life, things that have made me someone who prefers to catch rather than jump - a fixer, if you like - and this makes me identify with the characters in these books. I'm often wondering how I would react in these situations. I hope I never have to find out.
So. This novel is once again a true page-turner. Utterly gripping, thought-provoking, exciting and, indeed, quite moving in places. I cannot recommend Harlan Coben highly enough. If you want to give him a go, read Deal Breaker first. Fall in love with the characters and watch them grow. It's a wonderful thing.
9.5/10