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Fatal  Cover Image Book Book

Fatal / John Lescroart.

Lescroart, John T. (Author).

Summary:

"From New York Times bestselling author John Lescroart, a riveting standalone novel about the unexpected, shattering, and lethal consequences of a one-night stand on a seemingly happily married couple. Kate loves her life. At forty-four, she's happily married to her kind husband, Ron, blessed with two wonderful children, and has a beautiful home in San Francisco. Everything changes, however, when she and Ron attend a dinner party and meet another couple, Peter and Jill. Kate and Peter only exchange a few pleasant words but that night, in bed with her husband, Kate is suddenly overcome with a burning desire for Peter. What begins as an innocent crush soon develops into a dangerous obsession and Kate's fixation on Peter results in one intense, passionate encounter between the two. Confident that her life can now go back to normal, Kate never considers that Peter may not be so willing to move on. Not long after their affair, a masked man barges into the cafe Kate is sitting in with her best friend, firing an assault weapon indiscriminately into the crowd. This tragedy is the first in a series of horrifying events that will show Kate just how grave the consequences of one mistake can be. An explosive story of infidelity, danger, and moral ambiguity, John Lescroart's latest thriller will excite and satisfy both his current and new fans." -- Provided by the Publisher.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781501115677 (hardcover) :
  • Physical Description: 307 p. ; 24cm.
  • Edition: First Atria Books hardcover edition.
  • Publisher: New York, New York : Atria Books, 2017.

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references.
Subject: Married people > Fiction.
Adultery > Fiction.
Murder > Investigation > Fiction.
Obsession in women > Fiction.
Women detectives > Fiction.
San Francisco (Calif.) > Fiction.
Genre: Psychological thrillers.
Psychological fiction.
Suspense fiction.

Available copies

  • 12 of 13 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Smithers Public Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 13 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Smithers Public Library F LES (Text) 35101000518022 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2016 October #1
    *Starred Review* Kate meets Peter at a dinner she attends with her husband and becomes intrigued with the charming, married man. She wants a little fling and sets out to seduce him. She succeeds, then ends things quickly, but she's awakened the beast in Peter. A few days later Kate is having lunch with her closest friend, Beth, a cop, and the women are caught up and severely injured in a terrorist attack in the busy San Francisco restaurant, which is near Peter's office. That event, coupled with his brief tryst with Kate, convinces Peter to leave his wife and family and follow through on all his sexual desires, even though Kate has rebuffed him. Months later, Kate and Beth are both recovering from their injuries when they hear that Peter has been murdered. Beth is assigned the case, and, while her partner cares for his sick child, she follows every lead, getting nowhere fast. These characters are well drawn, and Beth would make a great continuing character should Lescroart choose to rest his Dismas Hardy series. On its own, this is a terrific stand-alone thriller that melds police procedural with plenty of suspense and action, and it should appeal to Harlan Coben or Gillian Flynn fans.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Lescroart by the numbers: 18 New York Times best-sellers; more than 12 million copies sold; translated into 22 languages in 75 countries. Copyright 2016 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2017 February
    Whodunit: A chilly Icelandic mystery with hints of Agatha Christie

    Yes, yes, another clever Scandinavian mystery novel. Can't those folks ever sit down and write an awful book? If Ragnar Jonasson's Snowblind is any indication, the answer is no. The novel is set in the tiny, north coast town of Siglufjörður, Iceland, a place as remote as it is difficult to pronounce. In the beginning, nobody in Siglufjörður locks his or her doors; by the time the book is halfway done, everybody does. Not that it will help much as the bodies begin to pile up in the newly crimson snow. If the book has overtones of Agatha Christie's works, that should come as no surprise, because before embarking on a writing career of his own, Jonasson translated 14 of Christie's books into his native Icelandic. And Snowblind definitely has the classic red herrings, plot twists and surprises that characterize the best of Christie's work. Jonasson's latest is nicely done and simply begs for a sequel.

    NOT TO BE IGNORED
    John Lescroart, in a major diversion from his Dismas Hardy legal-beagle series, lures readers into a whirlpool of obsession, revenge and murder with his standalone thriller, Fatal. It starts out simply enough, with a visceral chemical attraction between two married people—the problem being that they're not married to each other. At the outset, Kate is the spider and Peter is the willing fly. But as time goes by, his desire for her begins to take over his every waking moment. Peter's work suffers, his marriage inevitably suffers and his relationships with friends and associates begin to sour. But this all gets resolved fairly quickly—with his violent death. The suspect list is long and varied: his eldest son, who purchased an unregistered handgun; his put-upon wife; his erstwhile paramour; his paramour's jealous husband; the love-struck secretary—and I am just scratching the surface here. Rendered every bit as well as you'd expect from such an experienced storyteller, this is a book you will want to finish in one sitting.

    TROUBLES WILL FOLLOW
    Undoubtedly, I am not the first to compare Reed Farrel Coleman's writing to that of Dashiell Hammett or Raymond Chandler, and I suspect that I won't be the last. Coleman's protagonist, ex-cop Gus Murphy, is given to grim humors and is introspective almost to a fault, giving him a world-weary, bleary-eyed take on life, so similar to Hammett and Chandler's delightfully flawed characters. What You Break finds Murphy at odds with his memories, his ex-wife and the Russian mob. On a whim, he follows a friend he believes may be in danger, and scant minutes later, he watches the gangland execution of an unsavory-looking character. Meanwhile, he has reluctantly accepted the highly remunerative work of looking into the stabbing murder of a young woman, for which there is a likely guilty suspect but no evident motive. These two disparate cases weave together, their major common factor being Gus Murphy and his dogged determination to seek out the truth. 

    TOP PICK IN MYSTERY
    Hideo Yokoyama's Six Four, translated by Jonathan Lloyd-Davies, is by no means just another mystery novel, but rather an award-winning cultural phenomenon on the scale of Stieg Larsson's Millennium Trilogy. In its first week on sale in Japan, more than 1 million copies of Six Four were sold. The book went on to make its way solidly into the bestseller list in the U.K. All of that to say, there is a lot of buzz around this book, all of it well deserved. The story takes place in Prefecture P, a nonexistent Japanese city. The mystery has its roots in a crime that took place in the 1980s. A 7-year-old girl was kidnapped, and years later, the abduction and subsequent death of the child remains unsolved, a serious "loss of face" for the Prefecture P police department. The reinvestigation into the case falls to an unlikely candidate, Yoshinobu Mikami, for whom the case has a particular resonance: Mikami's own daughter has gone missing, and the poignant similarities between the cases are not lost on the canny detective. Further complicating matters is the internecine warfare between the administrative and investigative components of the police department. Each has an axe to grind, with both axes hanging directly over Mikami's outstretched neck. Yokoyama's prose is crisp and skillfully translated; the plot, while complicated, is thoroughly believable and compelling. This is a major book, one that will stay in your mind well after you have turned the last page.

     

    This article was originally published in the February 2017 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.

    Copyright 2017 BookPage Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2016 October #2
    After dishing out 20-plus cases to San Francisco attorney Dismas Hardy and his friends and relations (The Fall, 2015, etc.), Lescroart pens a stand-alone whose Bay Area is just as tense and treacherous even if you're not part of the justice system.Inspector Beth Tully, SFPD, is part of that system, of course. But her best friend, MBA housewife Kate Jameson, is far outside it, at least until she confides in Beth that she's been fantasizing about a man she and her husband, Ron, met the other night at the home of Ron's law partner, Geoff Cooke, and his wife, Bina, a man whose last name she doesn't even know. Beth naturally tells her to forget about him; Kate naturally phones Bina and gets his name and phone number; one thing leads to another; and in record time, Kate and attorney Peter Ash are bedded down in the discreet Meridien Hotel. Since neither wants to hurt their families, they both promise that their one-afternoon stand will remain just that and that neither one will say a word. Finis—except that Kate, who won't let the affair go, starts calling Peter again, producing exactly the effects she swore she'd avoid. Meanwhile, life goes on: domestic complications await Peter, his wife, Jill, and their high school twins, Eric and Tyler; a gang of terrorists shoots up the Ferry Building, seriously wounding both Kate and Beth; and six months later, police fish Peter's body out of San Francisco Bay, maybe a gunshot suicide, maybe not, triggering a search for whomever might have been responsible for his death and the other deaths that follow. Lescroart manages the first movement of this cautionary tale by mixing his pitches with exquisite control. Once the homicide investigation kicks in, things become altogether more routine, though he still has a few nifty surprises in store for fans who'd expect nothing less. Copyright Kirkus 2016 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2016 August #1

    A New York Times best-selling author of multiple series, with the Dismas Hardy series perhaps the best known, Lescroart here offers a stand-alone. When Kate attends a dinner party with devoted husband Ron, she meets Peter (there with his wife) and is wildly attracted to him. Her obsession leads to a burning one-night stand, after which Kate pulls back, sure she can get on with her life. But not so fast. A masked man shooting up the café where Kate sits with her best friend is only the first of several incidents indicating that Kate has made a grave mistake.

    [Page 61]. (c) Copyright 2016 Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2016 October #1
    With his new stand-alone, Lescroart takes an infrequent step away from the lives of lawyer Dismas Hardy and his pal Abe Glitsky (last seen in The Fall) to introduce Sgt. Beth Tully of the San Francisco homicide squad. Beth is a hardworking single mom whose longtime friend Kate Jameson initiates an affair with a married man named Peter Ash six months before he is murdered. Beth and partner Ike McCaffrey are assigned to investigate the killing, propelling Beth into the uncomfortable position of interrogating Kate in a manner that barely falls short of accusation and causes a painful rift between the friends. What follows is a complicated turn of events that brings about the deaths of two more victims before Beth and Ike are able to sort through their growing list of suspects. VERDICT True to form, Lescroart handles his multiple story lines with aplomb, enticing readers to leave Dismas Hardy behind—for now. [See Prepub Alert, 7/18/16.]—Nancy McNicol, Hamden P.L., CT. Copyright 2016 Library Journal.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2016 October #4
    Bestseller Lescroart (The Fall and 18 other Ditmas Hardy novels) successfully blends a police procedural with a whodunit in this absorbing standalone. A few days after meeting at a dinner party in San Francisco, Kate Jameson, who's married, phones lawyer Peter Ash about a private legal matter and suggests they rendezvous at a downtown hotel, where she has a room. After they end up having sex, Kate doesn't want a repeat, but Peter becomes obsessed with her. Soon afterward, Kate and her best friend, Beth Tully, a San Francisco homicide inspector, survive a terrorist attack. Six months later, Beth and her partner, Ike McCaffrey, are called to a beach where Peter's body has washed up. The corpse, which was in the water for over a day, has a bullet hole in the chest, but the bullet is missing. With so little to work with and alibis abounding, Beth and Ike make slow progress. The challenges for the protagonists lend verisimilitude to the story and give it a satisfying rhythm. Lescroart keeps readers guessing until the very end. Agent: Barney Karpfinger, Karpfinger Agency. (Jan.) Copyright 2016 Publisher Weekly.

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