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In this “deliciously twisty” (The Wall Street Journal) thriller with “the most clever plot twist of the year” (The Washington Post), expat Kate Moore discovers that a massive terror attack on Paris is not what it seems—from the New York Times bestselling author of The Expats.
“[The Paris Diversion is] thriller writing at its absolute best . . . with echoes of Graham Greene and John le Carré.”—Jeffery Deaver
American expat Kate Moore drops her kids at the international school, makers her rounds of chores, and meets her husband Dexter at their regular café: a leisurely start to a normal day.
Across the Siene, tech CEO Hunter Forsyth stands on his balcony, wondering why his police escort just departed, and frustrated that his cell service has cut out.
And on the nearby rue de Rivoli, Mahmoud Khalid climbs out of an electrician’s van, elbows his way into the crowded courtyard of the world’s largest museum, and removes his windbreaker.
That’s when people start to scream.
Reviews
This book is absolutely terrible and a total waste of time. The plot is ridiculous, if there even is one, and impossible to understand. The chapters jump around so much it is impossible to follow what is going on and when it is the past and when the present. There are so many characters just thrown in with little initial description that it is hard to keep track of who goes with who. The story endlessly bounces back and forth from the present to the past, from country to country, and from character to character to the point where you never know where you are or why. I can't believe I was stupid enough to even finish it because the ending was totally without substance, excitement or meaning!
By 42hearts17
This is one of the most boring books I have ever read. Mountains of descriptive verbiage to fill the volume needed for a book, with a lane and thin plot.
By Yoavziv
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By Mim3
I’ve read the books greedily. Pavone is so good at getting inside his characters heads when they are under duress, so are you. Love the Paris setting, and the story takes the best advantage of the surroundings. The story, though a follow-on, it can stand on it’s own with the author’s ability to weave past and present.
By nmp apps
Very hard to read any more of his books. He needs to settle on one and complete it instead of constantly referring to other books. Last one for me
By noeleet