The Search (Eve Duncan)
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Average customer review:Product Description
Five CDs, 6 hours
Performance by Carolyn McCormick
Iris Johansen brings back Sarah Patrick from The New York Times bestseller The Killing Game in a new novel that draws her inexorably into the path of a killer bent on revenge.
Sarah Patrick has a gift for finding what no one else can, whether it's a missing child, the survivor of a collapsed building, or the long-buried skeleton of a murder victim. Working search and rescue with Monty, her golden retriever, as part of the ATF K-9 unit, she's earned a reputation as the best when a recovery seems impossible.
Billionaire John Logan needs the best. Sarah and Monty are his only shot at locating a kidnapped scientist, and he doesn't hesitate to pull strings in Washington to get them. Sarah wants guarantees-safety for herself and Monty, and Logan's help in freeing her from a blackmailer's demands. Once she takes on the perilous assignment, though, even Logan's power may not be enough to shield her. Because the killer is watching, waiting and devising a chillingly perfect vengeance.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1664211 in Books
- Published on: 2000-06
- Released on: 2000-06-27
- Formats: Abridged, Audiobook
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 6
- Binding: Audio CD
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Search-and-rescue worker Sarah Patrick and Monty, her talented golden retriever, take center stage in this deft, suspenseful outing. The immensely appealing heroine was introduced as a secondary character in Iris Johansen's previous thriller The Killing Game. Back, too, is John Logan from Face of Deception, the charismatic billionaire whose very personal vendetta against a stop-at-nothing killer pulls Sarah into a high-stakes game of search and destroy.
When Logan's top-secret research station in South America is attacked and his chief scientist kidnapped, Sarah and Monty manage to track the hostage through the jungle and save his life. But that's only the beginning in what turns out to be a series of sadistic and deadly attempts to destroy Logan. Despite Sarah's initial distrust, she comes to respect and ultimately love Logan--which makes her and Monty targets for the killer's vengeance, too. The action moves swiftly across the globe, from the American Southwest to Colombia to Taiwan, and finally to North Dakota, in a tense, dramatic denouement. Johansen manages to explicate her characters' back-stories and illuminate their motivation as she moves the action forward with skillful pacing. Fans of the author's previous suspense thrillers featuring forensic sculptor Eve Duncan won't be disappointed that she plays only a bit part in Johansen's newest; Sarah and Monty are worth a series of their own, and The Search is a terrific beginning. --Jane Adams
From Publishers Weekly
Two strong-minded women from Johansen's bestselling Killing Game make return appearances in her latest thriller, with their billing reversed: Irish-Apache search-and-rescue worker Sarah Patrick is the star, while her friend, forensic sculptor Eve Duncan, takes a supporting role. The center-stage love story also features a twist. Eve's billionaire entrepreneur ex-lover, John Logan, falls for Sarah even while risking her life in his war with hyper-evil Martin Rudzak, who has already killed his own half-sister, Chen Li, rather than lose her to John. Johansen's roots lie in historical romance, but her thrillers ooze enough testosterone to suggest she also descends from the house of Robert Ludlum. Sarah and her fabulous canine partner, golden retriever Monty, slog into the aftermaths of a Turkish earthquake and a Taiwanese mudslide, and engage in a heartbreaking search for drowned teens in a lake near Sarah's Arizona cabin. They deal with bullets and bombs and collaborate to save a cruelly trapped wolf, dubbed Maggie, whose unlikely cross-species passion for Monty provides neat commentary on female-male attraction in general--and there's no need to be a dog-lover to revel in Sarah and Monty's empathetic closeness. On the downside, Johansen seems more interested in telling her story than in writing it. To create a sense of urgency, she relies heavily on the device of the two-word sentence and the one-sentence paragraph; parts of the book read like shorthand. Sarah and John globe trot, but there's scant sense of place, and minor characters like nasty Sen. Todd Madden are one-dimensional. Then again, the novel admirably eschews gush and wallpaper--in a postfeminist way, Sarah's ruggedness simply is. For better or for worse, Johansen pushes the gender boundary in popular fiction, offering up that rarity: a woman's novel for men. Major ad/promo. (June)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Working with golden retriever Monty as part of the ATF K-9 unit, Sarah Patrick excels at search-and-rescue. But her quest to find a kidnapped scientist for billionaire John Logan may be her last.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Customer Reviews
If You Love Romantic Suspense--Read This Book Immediately!
There are some stories you just don't want to end. The Search by Iris Johansen is one of those stories. This book not only brings back all the characters from Ms. Johansen's last two novels but provides a story that went way beyond my expectations of this book.
John Logan, that wonderful millionaire who helped Eve Duncan search for the reamins of her murdered daughter is suddenly slapped in the face with horrendous evil from his past. When one of his research facilities is blown up and a brilliant scientist is kidnapped, Logan calls in Sarah Patrick and her golden retriever, Monty. Logan knows his only chance of rescuing the scientist alive is through the special talents of Sarah and Monty. He promises Sarah that this is a one-time job and then he will never bother her or Monty again. However, what is suppose to be a one-time deal explodes as Logan frantically tries to confront his past and save those in the present.
The chemistry between Logan and Sarah sizzles. The evil is enough to give even hard core suspense readers chills up their spines. There are no words to adequately describe this novel and sensations it makes you feel. This book is fantastic. I especially love the way Ms. Johansen not only shows the communication between Sarah and Monty, but also gives Monty his own story line that keeps the reader intrigued. I would love for Ms. Johansen's next novel to feature one of the secondary characters in the story named Galen. He definitely sounds like a lead character that deserves his own story.
Put out your hard-earned money for this novel. It is well worth the investment.
ANOTHER WINNER...FROM JOHANSEN
John Logan is in a desperate situation, his top secret project has been sabotaged, all employed are dead except for one man being held for ransom by a madman hell-bent on revenge. Logan knows he must rescue the man in order to find out what secrets he knows, and to save his life. For this mission to work, Logan will need the cooperation of the expert search/rescue team of Sarah Patrick and her golden retriever, Monty.
Sarah is not a big fan of Logan and is furious that she is forced to help him.
Once the mission has begun, Sarah realizes Logan's promises of safety may not be enough...for Sarah has become an object in the killer's plan.
The clock is ticking for Sarah and Logan to put a stop to anymore killings.
"The Search" is EXCELLENT summer reading. It is an exciting, fast-paced and well-written thriller, that all readers will enjoy.
Iris Johansen has scored another HIT, bringing back characters from her previous novel "The Killing Game".
A MUST read.
Nick Gonnella
Iris needed more writing time...
I haven't finished the book yet which is wonder with the large print, spacious spaces between the lines, too much indentation on the page all for the publisher to stretch the book to 384 pags. An English teacher would complain to a student about the padding if this were done in school.
Now for the story line. I was jazzed about the story of a golden retriever, John and Sarah. But there is no building of characters or words to help describe the situations around them. Sarah is one sad person and complains constantly about death in her business, I wonder why she is in the business of finding people. Monty is always sad. (At least let him find someone alive to build up his ego.) John, how can he have so much money and be so in touch with everything. Does he delegate anything? The most interesting character that hasn't been built up is Galen.
I am a fan of Iris J. but this books is so ho hum I wondered what the other folks were reading when I read their reviews. It doesn't even touch The Ugly Duckling or Reap the Wind.



