Home :: Books :: Mystery & Thrillers  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers

Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
The Runner

The Runner

List Price: $7.99
Your Price: $7.19
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 3 4 .. 6 >>

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Well written, expertly researched and very improbable
Review: Runner is Reich's second novel. It takes us to post war Germany, and an intrepid lawyer (Devlin Judge) searching for his brother's murderer. The villian happens to be Erich Seyss--SS Officer who oeprated behind the lines.

The book could have stood very easily on the tension of Judge's desire for revenge over his brother'surder. At first glance, it looks like this is what the book is about, but Reich reveals a plot involving Patton, the SS, and German industrialists. Yes, Patton found the Germans preferrable to the Russians, and history has proven him right, but the sinister main plot of the book that unfolds is unbelievable. Just as the solutions to remedy the problem are equally unlikely.

Of course, there is a love story, but what has become cliche in thrillers and Hollywood adaptations, is idea that two people eyeball each other and they manage to fall madly in love with each other in a few hours or days. Yawn -- I've seen this a thousand times.

As to the research, Reich is dazzling in his command of post war Germany. Certainly, he has spent time understanding the character and bent of George Patton. He obviously went to the trouble of figuring what was and was not still standing in Germany during the time period, and he is correct in his description of the Russians as locusts.

Runner is well written, well researched, but improbable. That doesn't make it a bad book, but it leaves it in the middle of the pack.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Run for it!!!
Review: An unbelievably well laid out book that is fun to read and hard to put down.

All the hallmarks of a potential movie to be made.

The story gives us an insight to an almost forgotten era- the immediate post European war months, before the fall of Japan.

Based on a cat and mouse chase accross ravaged Germany by a former NY detective (now army major) who is after Germany's Olympic hero (now a SS war criminal), Reich's idea of using the simmering tension of the Potsdam conference and the mutual distrust of UK/US - USSR scenario is a good one.

We must remember that the opinion of the time was a new war with Stalin could break out within minutes and as we all know, the Allies had the hot headed generals that would have gladly used the still intact bloated Allied army and a rearmed German Army to execute the plan.

So General Patton is used as the lynch pin in this whole affair, which as it is known, held very extremist views on life and his well known death in a road accident is given that twist historians have theorised all along.

Enough spoiling...Read.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Fast and sleek
Review: Christopher Reich has written a sleek, high-octane thriller with a wonderful historical backdrop. Unfolding amidst the shattered ruins of Europe in the immediate wake of World War II, "The Runner" tells the story of Devlin Judge, an American lawyer working the Nuremberg trial who goes on a vendetta to hunt down the escaped Nazi war criminal who murdered his brother.

Judge's personal quest is just part of the story as he gradually unravels a sinister plot that will undoubtedly plunge the world into a third global conflict. Some of history's biggest players make an appearance in the book: Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin. General George S. Patton is a central figure in the story... and a shady one at that.

The pace is steady and the narrartive solid. In the tradition of "Numbered Account," Reich has penned a "thinking man's" thriller. His protagonists are real people; not action hero cardboard cutouts. Reich is proving himself a suspense writer of the top order.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Chris Reich did it again!
Review: Yes, Chris Reich did it again! I just finished reading his second novel, The Runner. Wow! I admit you that it is the most complicated novel I had to read it real slowly so I wont miss anything in the long run. This book is so exciting as the first one, The Numbered Account but they both are different in time settings. The second book is set up in postwar Germany, having problems in accepting the defeat and the fall of the Nazis. The protagonist, Devlin Judge was in the hunt on the former Olympic sprinter, Erich Seyss, who became the White Lion who was responsible for killing Judge's brother. Avenging for the brother's death he have the resources to use with the United States Army to hunt the White Lion at what price? Turning the profit from the Army into a blown-out conspiracy against Judge and he had to get it out...Erich Seyss isn't giving up the desires to destroy him, the Army and even for all! I assure you that this book have plots which will stop you from finding out how to stop the White Lion. Chris Reich had it written very well with the historical facts with the fiction, respect the cultural, social and languages of the post-war Germany. It made me felt that I am in that time, seeing the events happen in the war and can imagine the moods in story-telling. He did it wonderfully! Get tuned in "The Runner". You wont miss anything from this book but please read it slowly to enjoy every bit of the pages! I recommend everyone to read it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Move Over Robert Ludlum
Review: Like Daniel Silva, Christopher Reich leads a new generation of intrigue thriller authors. "The Runner" is steeped in historic background that brings the post-WWII period to life at the same time as it provides an electrifying read. What's more it dares to provide a possible explanation of what really happened to General Patton at the end of the war. He was a man who had outlived his time and usefulness, and the convenience of his death has to raise the kind of "what-if" questions that are grist for a gifted storyteller like Reich. Now I must read his other two novels for I have become a fan.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Excellent post WWII novel
Review: I am not a WWII buff like my husband, but read this book because it was available. I highly recommened it as it is set immediately after WWII as Berlin is being divided among the Allies. The post-war conditions of Germany were written in such vivid detail, I felt as if I was reading non-fiction. Immensely accurate and a great read. Characters are well developed. Gave it 4 stars just because it's not my favorite genre. Passed it on to my mother-in-law to read. Interesting book.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Not a Front Runner
Review: Disappointed. Plain and simple. Some interesting ideas but... I never really cared for the hero in the book- sort of a wimp. The other characters were just as bad. I didn't really care what happened to any of them. He also seems to bash America a bit. The USA vs. The Soviets? Not even a contest. Russia had already lost 20-30 million people fighting the Nazis. The Motherland didn't have much punch left. She even lost 100,000 taking a defeated Berlin! The ending was rather predictable. I could see it coming a mile away. Clint Eastwood/Line of Fire should sue. I disliked the book so much I left it on the cruise ship we were on. I have not done that with a book since Jurassic Park which I left in Italy. The writer also knows little about firearms. He calls pistol magazines "cartridges", he doesn't understand the difference between single and double action, and he really gets the capacity of magazines wrong. Kind of like Hollywood movies that let you fire without ever reloading. The author needs to read a F. Forsyth novel to learn how to put it together. Try "The Day of the Jackal" or "Dogs of War" for a complete suspense story. Sorry Reich.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: OUTSTANDING
Review: The greatest compliment I can give a book is wishing it didn't end. Reich writes 3 dimensional characters, No one all good or all bad. Our hero Devlin Judge is very honorable but not beyond breaking a few rules to catch the fugitive SS baddie Erich Seyss.
By the way, Seyss is one bad dude but, still quite human and at times almost symathetic. ALMOST. Action galore with real life historical figures like Patton, "Wild Bill" Donavon, Klaus Barbie,& IKE just add to the spark this novel is charged with.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Weak Beach Reading
Review: Nothing in this thriller distinguishes it from countless other airplane/beach conspiracy potboilers by authors like Robert Ludlum, Ken Follet, Jack Higgins, et al. Hang on, I take that back, it does have one of the most awfully written sex scenes I've ever come across-I wish I had the book here so I could transcribe some of it. Set in July 1945, as Germany is being carved up by the Allies, the story concerns Erich Seyss, an SS officer (and former Olympian) who breaks out of POW camp and embarks on a desperate scheme to assassinate the Allied leaders when they meet in Potsdam. He is pursued by the heroically named Devlin Judge, an American lawyer (and former NYC cop) who's in Germany to prosecute Nazi war criminals. And, as so often happens in these types of books, Devlin's brother happens to have been one of the victims of a mass murder ordered by Seyss! From there, things get pretty paint-by-numbers: villain is always just barely one step ahead, beautiful women enters and becomes caught up in chase, no one can be trusted, tables get turned, hunter becomes hunted, etc.

None of the characters rise veer from their basic motivation-they come across as clichés, despite Reich's attempt to provide a detailed backstory for each. Seyss's portrait as the lethally cunning Nazi machine is particularly weak. As noted elsewhere there are a number of minor gaffes in the details that cry out for more rigorous editorial attention, not to mention mangling of spelling and grammar in both German and English. Despite these flaws, Reich manages present a reasonably plausible portrayal of Germany just after surrender. Indeed, the novel's only somewhat intriguing theme is Reich's deliberate portrayal of the callousness of the average American occupier toward German civilians. However readers looking for a more sophisticated and well-written look at postwar Germany might try Philip Kerr's A German Requiem, the last volume in his "Berlin Noir" trilogy. Finally, it should be noted that while this is a work of fiction Reich's use of U.S. General George Patton and OSS chief "Wild" Bill Donovan would be completely libelous were they not dead and thus fair game for fictional reimagining. Those intrigued by Patton should check out Carlo D'este's biography, Patton: A Genius For War. For the story of Donovan and the origin of the OSS, check out Thomas Troy's book, Wild Bill and Intrepid.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent!
Review: Reich is better than Ludlum and Higgins, neither of whom draw their characters as well. I have a couple of problems with his German occupation information, but they are minor: I have always heard that Heidelberg wasn't bombed because several high ranking military personnel from both the U.S. and Great Britain had attended college there. I like that story but can't prove it. On the other hand, I know for a fact that a carton of cigarettes went further than he describes during the occupation. I worked with a German woman in San Francisco in the late 60s. In 1945, her brother "bought" passage, food and shelter from Berlin to Madrid, where he was able to find work, with one carton of cigarettes. It was called the cigarette economy, and it literally was true for most of Europe at the time.

However, this is a very interesting book, well paced and well written. Highly recommended.


<< 1 2 3 4 .. 6 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates