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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In his first book since the national best-seller Silent Witness, Richard North Patterson uses his mastery of characterization and suspense to give us a story of startling realism and originality—an extraordinary novel of presidential politics.
        In the year 2000, Senator Kerry Kilcannon's insurgent campaign against Vice President Dick Mason has come down to the last seven days—the time remaining until the California presidential primary. Whoever wins in California is likely to win the Democratic nomination, a prize that the Vice President is determined to deny Kerry at any cost. And for all the votes and enthusiasm his passion and personal magnetism have gained him, Kerry's problems are formidable.
        He is haunted by the tragedy of his older brother, James, a presidential candidate who was assassinated in California twelve years earlier. Kerry has stumbled in his advocacy of abortion rights, and a right-to-life fanatic has pushed this explosive issue to the forefront by murdering three people at a women's clinic. In addition, a journalist for a national newsmagazine is striving to verify the lethal story that, two years ago, while still married, Kerry had a secret love affair with Lara Costello, a reporter assigned to him on Capitol Hill. And now, even more threatening, Kerry is being stalked by the abortion-clinic murderer himself.
        This narrative is seamlessly interwoven with scenes from Kerry's past: his youth as the son of a drunken and abusive father; his self-image as the less-gifted younger brother of a brilliant yet distant senator; his reluctant ascension to his brother's place; his poignant romance with Lara Costello. And when Lara is ordered against her will to cover Kerry in California, he is forced once more to evaluate his life, and the terrible cost of his ambition to become President of the United States.
        With rare authenticity, Richard North Patterson depicts the world of high-stakes presidential politics on the verge of an explosion that is as dramatic as it is thought-provoking. But No Safe Place is also a story of people at their best and at their worst: their passions, their ideals, their flaws. A novel that will hold the reader enthralled from the first to the last sentence.
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 3, 1998
      Patterson (The Final Judgment; Silent Witness; etc.) is a skilled fabricator of courtroom dramas who here ventures well beyond his usual subject matter with mixed but still highly entertaining results. His protagonist, Kerry Kilcannon, is a young, somewhat Kennedy-esque senator whose older brother was assassinated during his campaign for the presidential nomination. Reluctantly stepping into his shoes, Kerry becomes fired by idealism and decides to seek the presidency himself. There is a dark secret in his past, however, involving an affair with Lara, a beautiful reporter for the New York Times (yes, she was named after the heroine in Dr. Zhivago). Its disclosure could sink his carefully weighed position on abortion, and his candidacy to boot. Also in his past was a boy whom Kerry, as a young lawyer, saved from a murderous father and who now, paradoxically, wants to kill candidate Kerry on behalf of the pro-lifers. These strands are all woven together in a series of flashbacks in the course of a few days during the vital California primary, and Patterson, old pro that he is, milks the tension for all it's worth. The political detail is authentic, although Kerry's positions are the kind you always hope in vain a politician will take while his smooth opponent, the vapid incumbent veep, is a thoroughly believable contemporary villain. But Patterson is really only playing with political ideas, though he does so intelligently enough. The cliched romantic writing (lobster cooked on the beach on Martha's Vineyard, many sighs and silences) and the trite melodrama of the young assassin show where the heart of the narrative really lies--not that the glossy approach will deter a large readership. 400,000 first printing; Literary Guild main selection; Random House audio and large print editions.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      It would have been difficult for any reader to rescue this painfully long and not very suspenseful political thriller. As it is, Alexander Adams does a credible job of leading the listener through the chaotic life of an Irish-Catholic presidential aspirant who happens to be following on the heels of his beloved brother, gunned down before the California Primary 12 years earlier. Adams's narrative tone is strong and clear but lacks warmth. Mercifully, he avoids the temptation to portray the characters through the collection of accents, Irish, Italian and African-American among them, that span the book's hopelessly contrived dialogue. J.B.B. (c) AudioFile 2002, Portland, Maine
    • AudioFile Magazine
      Kerry Kilcannon is running for president, following in his dead brother's footsteps. He is haunted by his past. Flashbacks abound, making the plot difficult to follow on audio. Patricia Kalember keeps track of all the characters, and as the drama builds to attempted murder, her soft voice brings the tension to its pinnacle. Patterson brings us a convoluted novel with a surprise ending. M.B.K. (c) AudioFile 2002, Portland, Maine
    • AudioFile Magazine
      Susan Denaker's sultry voice is a perfect match for Ross's suspenseful mystery set in the bayous of Louisiana. Kate Delaney, a Chicago Homicide detective, travels south to investigate her twin sister's death and teams up with bad-boy former cop Nick Broussard. Denaker ably contrasts Delaney's by-the-book personality with Broussard's laid-back Creole charm. Denaker's occasionally slow, lazy delivery is a great foil for Ross's casual, chatty prose and perfectly captures the various Big Easy characters. The chemistry between Delaney and Broussard is explosive as is the secret they uncover in the action-packed conclusion. Denaker's diverse vocal range and warm, expressive voice make this a listening pleasure. S.C.A. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award (c) AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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