On some level, this book has everything one could want from a crime thriller. Bank heists, fugitives, murders, a game of wits between a criminal and law enforcement. Unfortunately, though all of the elements are there, they never seem to fully come together.
On the positive side, the book does have some genuinely exciting moments. Combined with its short chapters and the author's writing style, that makes for a book that will likely keep the reader interested and turning the pages through what turns out to be a remarkably fast read. It also possesses all of the elements I want from such a thriller, from the exciting action scenes down to the personal stories of the characters.
However, when examining those personal stories, we begin to see the novel's weaknesses. Based on the publisher's description, one expects to read a story about a father and daughter with very different backgrounds struggling to communicate with each other and repair a broken relationship while pursuing a common goal. None of this really happens, though. Instead, despite an initially rocky reunion, the two characters seem immediately to fall in lockstep with each other and seldom so much as mention a word of their past. Not only is it a missed opportunity for some real human depth, but it strains the willing suspension of disbelief to the breaking point.
In fact, none of the characters seem entirely realistic. Their dialogue is clearly well-researched and filled with law enforcement jargon (that makes for a realistic if often jarring reading experience), but lacks real humanity. Some of the characters do have their little quirks--both linguistically and behaviorally--but at the end of the day, putting those superficial elements to the side, the vast majority of them seem entirely interchangeable.
All of that would be perfectly forgivable in a novel that fits more in the category of "brain candy" than "respectable literature" given that the action is sufficient to hold the reader's interest most of the time, but even the plot itself begins to unravel a bit as the book progresses. The story follows multiple subplots (some of which seem to come and go without any particular fanfare or resolution) but focuses primarily on two main stories, one of which involves a federal judge and the other of which is exactly what you'd expect based on the publisher's description. Though these seemingly unrelated plots eventually do unite, the mechanism by which they are united beggars belief. The application of deus ex machina required to pull of this unification is frankly staggering. Fortunately, this element of the plot will be quickly forgotten as the book moves toward its climax.
One of the main problems many people will have is that the description on the back of the book gives away far too much information. In fact, the reader will be most of the way through the book before all of the elements exposed by the marketing have taken place, leaving fairly little suspense throughout most of the story. The only real suspense left to the reader is just how the story will end.
The climax is the final point at which the book could redeem itself. Sadly, it never quite does so. Characters are introduced at the last minute who seem to serve no purpose other than to lengthen the book by so many pages. Those pages would have been better spent delivering a carefully timed and expertly paced climax, but the actual climax itself seems fairly rushed, and not particularly realistic.
I really wanted to like this book, and I do admit it had enough interesting elements to keep me somewhat entertained while I was reading. Unfortunately, though, it doesn't really seem to offer anything to the genre I haven't already seen done many times before, and often with greater success.
(Disclaimer: I received a free ARC of this book for purposes of review.)