"Chilling. . . . Day of Reckoning is dynamite."--Chicago Tribune John Katzenbach's third novel, now back in print, is the spellbinding story of a family in jeopardy and what happens when that family is pushed to the brink. Megan and Duncan Richards are no longer the radical activists they were in 1968. He's a banker, and she works in real estate. They have a fine house and three kids they adore. Their youth is safely stashed away until the day Duncan answers his office phone and gets the message he's been dreading from the woman he's spent two decades trying to forget. She called herself Tanya. In 1968, she was the beautiful, charismatic leader of northern California's radical Phoenix Brigade. She was the one who had assured Duncan and Megan that no one would be hurt in the robbery she'd so brilliantly orchestrated, but when it turned into a slaughter and nearly everyone involved was captured or killed, she laid the blame on them. The Richardses escaped. But now, after eighteen years in prison, Tanya herself is free again, poised to avenge her version of what happened on that blood-drenched day so long ago.
In short, this novel is as well written and conceived and constructed as any other commericial suspense novel of note. Sure, you can pick this book apart if you over analyze it; but again, the same holds true of most other novels. Hell, I can even find flaws in The Silence of the Lambs. The other reviewer should lighten up. John Katzenbach is a wonderful novelist. I hightly reccomend this one, as well as Just Cause, In the Heat of the Summer, and State of Mind. I have not yet read The Traveller, but it's next on my list. And then The Analyst and the Madman's Tale.
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