Max Allan Collins - You Cant Stop Me
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- Book:You Cant Stop Me
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- Publisher:Kensington Publishing Corporation
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- Year:2010
- Rating:4 / 5
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Max Allan Collins delivers cutting-edge action and suspense!
David Morrell , New York Times bestselling author of The Shimmer
Reality TV turns thriller! A killer yarn from a master of suspense.
James Rollins, New York Times bestselling author of The Doomsday Key
and for Max Allan Collins
Max Allan Collins has an outwardly artless style that conceals a great deal of art.
The New York Times
Max Allan Collins is masterful. His ability to sustain suspense is exceptional.
San Diego Union-Tribune
Max Allan Collins is the closest thing we have to a 21st-century Mickey Spillane.
ThisWeek (Ohio)
No one can thrust through a maze with the intensity and suspense of Max Allan Collins.
Clive Cussler
Max Allan Collins is among the finest crime writers today.
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Smooth and imaginative.
Publishers Weekly
Collins witty, hard-boiled prose would make Raymond Chandler proud.
Entertainment Weekly
A terrific writer!
Mickey Spillane
One of the new masters of the genre.
Atlantic Journal-Constitution
Simply open the book. The pages turn themselves. A fine novel by a fine writer.
John Lutz (on Road to Purgatory)
As cool as an Eskimo Pie on a summer day and as sharp as a Ginsu knife.
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (on The First Quarry)
A compelling talent for flowing narrative and concise, believable dialogue. Highly recommended.
Library Journal
Collins skillfully ties up a multitude of branches into the big, bloody bouquet one would expect from the author of The Road to Perdition . Sharp and satisfying
Publishers Weekly (on Deadly Beloved)
Road to Perdition (graphic novel)
Road to Purgatory
Road to Paradise
CSI series
Quarry in the Middle
The First Quarry
The Last Quarry
The Goliath Bone (with Mickey Spillane)
The Big Bang (with Mickey Spillane)
The History of Mystery
(with Matthew Clemens & George Hagenauer)
As Barbara Allan (with Barbara Collins)
Antiques Bizarre
Antiques Flee Market
Antiques Maul
Antiques Roadkill
Also by Matthew Clemens
My Lolita Complex (with Max Allan Collins)
Dead Water: The Klindt Affair (with Pat Gipple)
CSI graphic novel series (with Max Allan Collins)
PINNACLE BOOKS
KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.
www.kensingtonbooks.com
For Lee Goldberg
who really knows TV
Seeing a murder on television can help work off ones antagonisms. And if you havent any antagonisms, the commercials will give you some.
A LFRED H ITCHCOCK
If you die horribly on television, you will not have died in vain. You will have entertained us.
K URT V ONNEGUT
John Christian Harrow had never much cared for the Iowa State Fair.
He was uncomfortable around throngs of people, and the cacophony of chatter, ballyhoo, and music always put a crease between his eyebrows. The skyline of vast barns, art-deco pavilions, Ferris wheels, and even a mammoth slide held no magic for him; overhead open-air cars of airsick passengers swaying like fruit about to ripen and fall made him question the general sanity of the human race.
The smells, whether the stench of farm animals or the lure of frying batter, did not appealthey made him neither want to milk a cow nor risk his arteries on a funnel cake. And now and then an unmistakable upchuck bouquet would waft across his nostrils. At least the day wasnt sweltering, as August often was here. It was eighty and humid and no picnic, but this wasnt heaven, this was Iowa.
At six-two, barely winning the battle to stay under two hundred pounds, Harrow might have been just another farmer gussied up to go to town, forty-something, short brown hair, penetrating brown eyes, strong chin, high cheekbones, a weathered, slightly pockmarked complexion, tie loosened and collar unbuttoned.
But J.C.as anyone who knew him for more than five minutes called himwas not farmer but a detective. He was in fact a seasoned field agent and criminalist for the Iowa Department of Criminal Investigation. And right now he detected a damp stripe down the spine of his dress shirt, and wished to hell that the Kevlar vest underneath came with pockets for ice bags. His sun-soaking, unbuttoned navy suitcoat concealed his holster and nine-mil, clipped to his belt, riding his right hip.
This was no day off to take in the states most celebrated festivities. And it wasnt the normal workday where he found himself either at a crime scene or in a lab or even in the field interviewing witnesses and suspects.
Today Harrow had drawn a special assignment as part of the extended protection team working on the President of the United Statess visit to the nations most famous state fair.
Usually cops augmented the Presidents Secret Service detail, but the events of September 11 had changed that. Ever since that tragic day, security weighed heavily on the minds of most Americans, and the government had become more creative in ways to protect those in their charge. They kept cops on the streets when they could and when necessary, used qualified others, like DCI Field Agent Harrow, to fill in.
The rule was, you had to have a badge to work protection detail.
Today, his DCI badgeprobably aided by the fact that he had a background in local politicsseemed to make him the perfect candidate for this particular task. Which sounded far more exciting in practice than it really was. Hed done very little in the morning other than walk around the fair and assess threats.
He had deemed the cow sculpted from butter as non-menacing unless the President decided to ingest it, in which case it would be death by cholesterol overdose. In the afternoon, before the President was introduced, Harrow stood on the stage, eyes processing possible troublemakers in the crowd, then maintained his vigil from stage left throughout the Commander in Chiefs address.
A thin man with too heavy a jacket for an August day, another who seemed jittery, a woman with a purse big enough to hold a gun or a bomb or God knew what
Harrow saw them all and reported them up the food chain to Secret Service. A certain amount of stress came along with searching for a potential assassin, but on the whole this was a vacation day with pay for Harrow. Despite his general disregard for politicians, and his lack of love for the fair itself, the DCI agent felt honored to be entrusted with a small part of his Presidents welfare.
After a well-received speech, the President was led down the stairs by the Secret Service contingent at stage right. Secret Service eyes quickly scanned left, ahead, right, and back again. Several more agents eyeballed the crowd on the other side of the wire fence between the audience and the backstage area. Trailing this group, still on stage, Harrow looked out over the still-cheering crowd.
Despite the chest-high wire fence, the throng pressed forward, each citizen wanting to shake hands with the leader of the free world, some wearing sunglasses, some not, some wearing hats, farmers, businessmen, housewives, women in power suits, young, old, middle-aged, an ocean of faces and bodies surging for a chance to press the famous flesh, or to get at least a closer-up glimpse of the President. Most were smiling, some looked confused, and some even afraid as the crush of people pushed toward the fence.
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