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The left-handed twin /

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: A Jane Whitefield novel ; bk.9 | A Jane Whitefield novel ; bk.9Publisher: New York : The Mysterious Press, 2021Edition: First editionDescription: 321 pages ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781613162590
  • 1613162596
Other title:
  • Left handed twin
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 813/.54 23
LOC classification:
  • PS3566.E718 L44 2021
Summary: When she agrees to help a woman escape a crazed ex-boyfriend who is friends with members of a Russian organized crime brotherhood, rescue artist Jane Whitefield leads a deadly crime syndicate on a wild chase through the Northeast from which only one party--Jane or her pursuers--will emerge alive.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Standard Loan Coeur d'Alene Library Adult Fiction Coeur d'Alene Library Book PERRY (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 50610023255511
Standard Loan Hayden Library Adult Fiction Hayden Library Book PERRY (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Checked out 05/28/2024 50610023644680
Standard Loan Rathdrum Library Adult Fiction Rathdrum Library Book PERRY (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 50610023644755
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

"Another stunner from a modern master."--Booklist (Starred Review)

Rescue artist Jane Whitefield leads a deadly crime syndicate on a wild chase through the Northeast



Jane Whitefield helps people disappear. Fearing for their lives, fleeing dangerous situations, her clients come to her when they need to vanish completely--to assume a new identity and establish a new life somewhere they won't be found. And when people are desperate enough to need her services, they come to the old house in rural western New York where Jane was raised to begin their escape.

It's there that, one spring night, Jane finds a young woman fresh from LA with a whole lot of trouble behind her. After she cheated on her boyfriend, he dragged her to the home of the offending man and made her watch as he killed him. She testified against the boyfriend, but a bribed jury acquitted him, and now he's free and trying to find and kill her.

Jane agrees to help, and it soon becomes clear that outsmarting the murderous boyfriend is not beyond Jane's skills. But the boyfriend has some new friends: members of a Russian organized crime brotherhood. When they learn that Sara is traveling with a tall, dark-haired woman who disappears people, the Russians become increasingly interested in helping the boyfriend find the duo. They've heard rumors that such a woman existed--and believe that, if forcibly extracted, the knowledge she has of past clients could be worth millions.

Thus begins a bloodthirsty chase that winds through the cities of the northeast before finally plunging into Maine's Hundred Mile Wilderness. But in a pursuit where nothing can be trusted, one thing is certain: only one party--Jane or her pursuers--will emerge alive.

Sequel to: A string of beads.

When she agrees to help a woman escape a crazed ex-boyfriend who is friends with members of a Russian organized crime brotherhood, rescue artist Jane Whitefield leads a deadly crime syndicate on a wild chase through the Northeast from which only one party--Jane or her pursuers--will emerge alive.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Library Journal Review

Jane Whitefield helps people disappear, and her latest client is a young woman from Los Angeles who cheated on her boyfriend, who then made her watch him murder the man with whom she had been involved. Despite her testimony, he was acquitted, and his Russian mafia contacts are trailing her--and Jane. Edgar Award winner Perry's first Jane Whitefield novel in seven years.

Publishers Weekly Review

At the start of Edgar winner Perry's engrossing eighth Jane Whitefield novel (after 2015's A String of Beads), Jane, a Native American guide who specializes in helping people in trouble disappear, finds a stranger, Sara Doughton, waiting for her one night in the Amherst, N.Y., house Jane shares with her new husband, surgeon Carey McKinnon. When Sara explains she's fled L.A. to escape a murderous former boyfriend bent on revenge, Jane agrees to help. Meanwhile, the ex-boyfriend enlists the aid of some Russian criminals, who soon take an interest in Jane. After relocating Sara in Boston with a new identity, Jane attempts to lose her pursuers in Maine on the Appalachian Trail. Utilizing wisdom from her Seneca ancestors and some bad-ass survival skills, Jane matches wits with a gang of elite killers. Though a few sequences strain credibility, Perry delivers nonstop action, relentless tension, and such three-dimensional secondary characters as the female thief Magda. Jane's developing relationship with Carey is a plus. Fans will hope they won't have to wait another six years for Jane's next outing. (Nov.)

Booklist Review

After a string of stellar stand-alones, Perry returns to his always-satisfying Jane Whitefield series (following Poison Flower, 2012), starring a Native American woman with a totally under-the-radar occupation: she disappears people whose lives are in danger. Jane has been trying to retire for years, but "runners" keep turning up on her doorstep in upstate New York, directed there by one of Jane's many contacts. So it is this time, when a young L.A. woman, Sara, appears, desperate to escape her former boyfriend, against whom she testified in a murder trial. Unfortunately, the boyfriend, now out of prison, has help of his own: Russian mobsters who are mainly interested in getting Jane to reveal the names of her previous runners and then selling that information to the highest bidders. As always in the series, Perry seasons the fast-moving chase narrative with engrossing details about becoming a new person, from constructing a false identity to relearning how to move through daily life in an unrecognizable way. This time, though, there is a stunning extra: with the mobsters closing in, Jane hopes to lose her pursuers by hiking Maine's Hundred-Mile Wilderness, the most arduous stretch of the Appalachian Trail. Cue the ever-versatile Perry to display his outdoor-adventure-writing chops. Not only is the 100-mile chase itself excruciatingly exciting, it's also chockablock with "I-didn't-know-that!" facts about trail survival. Another stunner from a modern master.

Kirkus Book Review

Jane Whitefield McKinnon's latest mission to hide a fugitive from violence puts herself squarely in the sights of Russia's fearsome Brotherhood. Sara Doughton had four good years with Los Angeles errand boy/arranger/skimmer Albert McKeith. Every night he'd take her to another party, sometimes more than one, for which he'd provided champagne or drugs or women, then take her home to bed. When Albert realized that Sara's attention had wandered to a singer's promoter, though, he shot the promoter dead in front of her. Charged as an accessory, she turned state's evidence and testified against Albert. Now he's beaten the rap and is gunning for her. Even though she hasn't helped a runner disappear since she was kidnapped herself, Jane agrees to leave her long-suffering physician husband behind once more and help Sara vanish. She's full of practical advice about what to change and how to think, and she's so successful that Albert, who's tracked Sara to Jane's hometown of Amherst, New York, only to recognize that now he's up against someone way out of his league, asks a well-connected acquaintance to set him up with someone who's better at this sort of thing. The someone turns out to be Oleg Porchen of the Bratva, who swiftly realizes that Sara's guide is much more valuable than the woman she's helping and promptly deploys serious human resources to track her down and bring her in. Porchen's dead-eyed professionalism is matched only by Perry's: An extended pursuit through the Hundred Mile Wilderness of the Appalachian Trail is particularly nail-biting. Hits the ground running and never lets up. Be sure to take a few deep breaths before plunging in. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Author notes provided by Syndetics

Thomas Perry is the bestselling author of over twenty novels, including Murder Book, the critically acclaimed Jane Whitefield series, The Old Man, and The Butcher's Boy, which won the Edgar Award. He lives in Southern California.

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