Hell for the Holidays: A Christopher Miller Holiday Thriller
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Average customer review:Product Description
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #874563 in Books
- Published on: 2007-11-29
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 400 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
When kidnappers seize seven-year-old Carlos Acevedo, the son of a U.S. customs agent, on Halloween, Jersey City FBI agent Christopher Miller swings into action in Grabenstein's gripping second holiday thriller (after 2006's Slay Ride). Miller's sidekick, Lieutenant Cimino, wonders why Carlos would be abducted without ransom demands. Meanwhile, Miller's own seven-year-old daughter, Angela, remains traumatized from an encounter with a monster Santa who held a gun to her head the previous Christmas. Hiding at a remote Wyoming hunting lodge is the mastermind behind these crimes, Dr. John Tilley, with a demonic plan to take over the nation and save Western civilization. In New York City, an embittered ex-GI awaits orders from Tilley, a visionary and prophet, for the next operation. In a spectacular finish, SWAT teams close in on home-grown terrorists planning an attack on the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade. This rapid-fire entertainment is sure to please Grabenstein's fans. (Nov.)
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From Booklist
A vast white-supremacist group adopts al-Qaeda organizational techniques and tactics, and it's FBI agent Christopher St. Chris Miller's task to stop them. The group has obtained U.S. Stinger fire-and-forget shoulder-fired missiles and plans to use them to shatter America's Thanksgiving holiday. Family man Miller is a former Notre Dame running back and 20-year vet of the bureau. He's based in Jersey City, New Jersey, and his office's number-one priority is investigating foreign terrorists; as a result, native terrorists simply aren't on the bureaucratic bureau's radar, and Chris is hard-pressed to thwart them. Grabenstein seems to have mined his likable cop series set on the Jersey Shore (Whack a Mole, 2007) for inspiration. St. Chris is simply an older, black version of straight-arrow Detective John Ceepak, and neither hero does much nuance. Think of Hell for the Holidays as a beach book—timed for release after the beach season. Gaughan, Thomas
About the Author
Customer Reviews
Holiday Terror
WARNING: This review (and the book) will spoil events from the previous book. If you are interested in the series, start there.
It's been almost a year since FBI Agent Chris Miller's daughter was held hostage by a terrorist disguised as Santa. And the signs are becoming obvious that it will make the up coming holiday season harder.
As much as Chris would like to focus on her, something is heating up in the country. It starts with the kidnapping of a neighbor's son on Halloween and grows from there. The chatter is that a group of white supremacists are planning an attack on US soil. With no one in the FBI willing to give him the help he needs, Chris must work with a few friends in the bureau to track them down. Can they do it before the attack takes place?
I was hesitant to read this book after how vile the villain was in the first. And I'm glad I did. Don't get me wrong, I still found the villain reprehensible, especially all the racists and homophobic slurs he said. But he wasn't evil just to be evil.
The book started out fine, but the tension increased every chapter. I couldn't believe how into it I was until I got to the end and had to take a few deep breaths. The threat was all too real, which made it even scarier.
And the characters were good. While the villain had to redeeming value, he wasn't one note. And the sub-plot with his daughter made Chris all the more real.
Thrillers aren't my normal reading choice, but I really enjoyed this one. If Chris is warding off evil during more holidays, I will be sure to celebrate them with him.
Solid Writing & Highly Entertaining
An Amazon search for the types of books I enjoy reading suggested Chris Grabenstein's "Jersey Shore" books featuring John Ceepak. I really enjoyed all those books so when I searched for additional books by Mr. Grabenstein I didn't hesitate to get "Hell For The Holidays." And what a terrific and exciting book this is.
The writing style in this book is different from the style in the Ceepak books, and well it should be. The narrator in those "Shore" books is 30 years younger and is a small-town neophyte police officer whereas the point-of-view in the "Holiday" books is that of a more mature and seasoned FBI agent. Both series of books are great and I applaud Mr. Grabenstein's ability to create such believable yet diverse major characters in two different environments, masterfully keeping them separate from one another.
"Hell For The Holidays" was difficult for me to put down. As one other reviewer said, the action and suspense continues to escalate all the way to the end of the book. The plot is neither overly convoluted nor contrived; as a matter of fact, it is frighteningly believable. And there are enough red herrings and just plain surprises in this story to keep you turning the pages. The book is skillfully written.
If you're looking for an exciting read with accurate law enforcement procedurals that has villians you love to despise and heroes you love to cheer, this book is for you. Thanks for the ride, Mr. Grabenstein; I look forward to the next Christopher Miller Holiday Thriller.
Good characters, twists, turns, everything
I've followed the author since his first summer tale. His characters are crisp and well crafted. The story twists from here-to-there and back again. Lots of characters to like and to hate. Top notch effort.




