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Mass Market Paperback End Game Book

ISBN: 0812515978

ISBN13: 9780812515978

End Game

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Book Overview

The author of Deathright returns with a high-tension game of cat-and-mouse that turns Manhattan into a giant chessboard. Stryker is expert at putting the fate of the world in the balance and making... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

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You'll never look again at chess as boring

THE PLOT A body is found with the letter "P" carved into its forehead. P stands for pawn, and it is dumped in the upper Manhattan, using the streets as a chessboard. The Knight and Bishop follow. And the chess-game begins. Inspector Regal has been chosen by the killer to play the game, which he does badly through moves placed in the New York Times. As long as the game is interesting, no more bodies. But Regal is not a very good chess player, the game becomes dull for the killer, and another body appears. But Regal has an ace in the hole: a retired master player named Billy Abbott who left the chess world behind and disappeared before it took over his life. Abbott calls Regal and tells him the moves to make to keep the game interesting, and for awhile, he does -- even turning the game around and winning. But winning the game is not the object of the killer who has targeted Regal personally. A sub-plot involves a cop working for Regal who gets killed during the line of duty while hunting down Panamanian drug runners. There is a female cop who loves the dead cop, and she wants justice. On the political side, Regal keeps butting heads with his departmental rival who is in charge of both investigations. On the personal side, Regal suspects his wife of having an affair with a power mogul -- and Regal doesn't even care any more.This is the second "Dev Strkyer" novel, a nom-de-plume for Warren Murphy and Molly Cochrane.WHAT I LIKED I love Murphy and Cochrane's work, and this one is no exception. Well-written, the chess strategies are well-mixed, and the story moves along fast enough with a lot of sub-plots mixed in to keep life interesting when the bodies are on hold. Even the political manouevering is interesting. The ending, although pat, is not a typical "everybody lives happily ever after" finish.WHAT I DIDN'T LIKE The climax is a little *too* pat, and too action-oriented rather than detection-based. I knew who the killer was long before they were revealed, and I'm not even sure why Stryker chooses to reveal them when he does, other than the realization perhaps that the reader already knows by then so the mystery is really gone. The only question was when and where they were going to be caught, if at all. As well, Stryker doesn't really play fair with the reader at the start in terms of the depiction of the killer, but I still figured it out before the end despite the intentional misdirection.OVERALL RATINGGood writing, despite figuring it out and the intentional misdirection at the start. Nice mix of plot and character development. Give it a 3.5 out of 5.0, up slightly by my love for Murphy and Cochrane's style.
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