Reviews for Golden hour [large print]
Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Battles continues his authorized takeover of Woods’ expansive turf with a tale that puts ex–CIA agent Teddy Fay in both the driver’s seat and the hot seat. Long before Teddy ended his career as a rogue intelligence agent by faking his death in a plane crash, he masterminded Operation Golden Hour, a task force devoted to taking down the Trust, in whose name Tovar Lintz funded terrorist operations around the globe. Now Tovar’s son, Felix Braun, chief executive of Braun Logistics and Security, has decided that it’s payback time against the agents behind Golden Hour, killing three of them and targeting the rest. Current CIA director Lance Cabot, one of the few people who know that Teddy’s still alive and flourishing under the guise of both Centurion Pictures producer Billy Barnett and Mark Weldon, star of Centurion’s new filmStorm’s Eye, persuades him to go on the offense against whoever’s executing his agents and leaving a Trust signature behind. The publicity tour Mark Weldon is about to join in Italy for the screening ofStorm’s Eye at the World Thriller Film Festival will provide the perfect cover, argues Lance. And he’s exactly right, for movie melodrama and offscreen maneuvering merge seamlessly with Teddy’s mission against Felix Braun, who’s very interested indeed to learn that the prime mover behind Golden Hour is still alive. Though there’s never any serious doubt about how all this will end, Battles plots much more tightly than Woods did—though that’s a low bar to clear—and fans of the series, first developed as a counterpoint to the ancient Stone Barrington franchise, won’t be disappointed. Proof that the “golden hour” extends far beyond the ideal time to shoot movie exteriors. Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.