Worst Case by James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge is the third book in the Michael Bennett detective series. Readers will not have to read the other two books in the series to follow along as this New York Detective takes on a child kidnapper with a social agenda. Bennett is a single father with 10 children — not all of them biological — whose holy grandfather Seamus and nanny Mary Catherine make his life a little less hectic and in some cases even more so.
Bennett must not only balance his fatherly duties with detective work, but also must learn to separate the cases he works on as part of major crimes. New York is an excellent location for this detective, with its high crime boroughs and its high class residents. Worst Case is narrated superbly by three narrators, Bobby Cannavale, Orlagh Cassidy, and John Glover as each voice takes on either Bennett, FBI child kidnapping expert Emily Parker, or the serial murderer.
“Without pausing, he veered to my left, bounded up onto the low iron railing, and dove without a sound off the bridge.
I think my heart actually stopped. I ran to my left and looked down. The guy was plummeting toward the water when there was a strange bloom of color that at first I thought was an explosion. I though he’d blown himself up, but then I saw the orange canopy of a parachute.” (page 187)
Readers will enjoy the fast paced, short chapters with their clipped sentences as tension builds and Bennett runs in circles around the city at the behest of the killer. The narrators of the audio pulled off the New York and Virginia accents as they read through the book, although the sound effects of gun shots and other items were a bit disturbing, especially when driving late a night on dark highways.
Worst Case is another sign that this series about Michael Bennett is just heating up. Another suspenseful winner.
This is my 11th book for the 2010 Thriller & Suspense Reading Challenge.





Diana M. Raab‘s The Guilt Gene is a collection steeped in nostalgia that fails to glorify the past. The collection is broken down into six sections: “Cherry Blossoms, Book Tour, Two Evils, The Devil Wears a Poem, 

The Wrong Miracle by Liz Gallagher uses tongue twisting phrases and juxtaposition to shed light on and deal with the expectations of family and society. Wrong miracles occur everyday in Gallagher’s world from the cat that drags in a poem it found to a breeze that cracks the narrator open. Gallagher’s playful phrases will have readers smiling in amusement, and she enjoys turning cliches upside down.
About the Poet: (Photo Credit: Vladi Valido)
Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni‘s One Amazing Thing is brilliant in its ability to capture reader’s attention and hold it throughout the narrative as the points of view change and characters share a life-changing moment. Divakaruni’s writing places readers in the room with her characters and traps them there, making the terror of their impending doom real. Each character is at the visa office seeking papers to travel back to India when something happens and causes the building to partially collapse upon them.
About the Author:

About the Author:
Charlaine Harris‘s Club Dead is the third book in the southern vampire series, which I’m reading for the 






