
Résumé:
Genre-jumping novelist Dan Simmons makes a splash no
matter where he leaps. His 1985 horror debut,
, garnered the World Fantasy Award; the
vampiric took the Bram Stoker Award;
, the opening volume of his Hyperion saga, snagged
the Hugo. In 1999's , Simmons spun fact, fiction,
and Ernest Hemingway into a ripe WWII spy thriller, and with
Darwin's Blade, Simmons dives headlong into the
suspense pool. The country's foremost accident investigator, Dr. Darwin
Minor, reconstructs automobile accidents for his friends,
Lawrence and Trudy Stewart, whose firm specializes in
uncovering lucrative, yet unremarkable, insurance fraud. Odd,
then, that two Russian hit men in a souped-up Mercedes E 340
attempt to murder Dar in a 160 mph car chase that results in
an airborne Mercedes and two dead Russians. Sydney Olson, the California state's attorney's chief
investigator, who's investigating an accomplice-murdering
fraud ring, plans to release a story highlighting the Russian
mafia's involvement and Dar's name, and then to spend a lot
of bodyguard-time with Dar. Dar returned her challenging gaze. Suddenly she did not
look like Stockard Channing to him anymore. "You're staking
me out like that goat in the dinosaur movie...
Jurassic Park." "Exactly," said Sydney Olson, smiling openly at Dar
now. Lawrence raised his hand like a schoolboy. "I just don't want to find my friend Dar's bloody leg on
my moon roof someday, okay?" As the bond between Dar and Sydney grows, so grow the
assassination attempts, a gruesome body count, and the
realization that a state-wide charitable organization funded
by the country's most famous defense attorney is behind the
murderous ring. With its tight plot, memorable and likable cast, and
brisk, intelligent narrative,
Darwin's Blade has "series" written all over it.
Better make room on the Edgar dais now.
--Michael Hudson
H"Stupidity kills. Absolute stupidity kills absolutely."
Simmons, who has moved effortlessly from horror (Children of
the Night) to science fiction (Hyperion; Endymion) to
thrillers (The Crook Factory) obviously had a lot of fun
writing this gripping suspense thriller about automobile
insurance fraud rackets in Southern California. Former NTSB
investigator Dr. Darwin Minor (Ph.D., physics) is the best at
what he does. As the country's leading "accident
reconstruction specialist," Darwin has saved the insurance
industry millions, as well as solving the most confounding
cases of vehicular stupidity. But suddenly, he finds himself
the target of assassins, resulting in a wild car chase that
is only the first of many spellbinding set pieces. Is Darwin
being targeted for business reasons, or is the attack somehow
tied to the ongoing federal investigation of the Alliance, a
Russian mafia-type group that specializes in staging
accidents to perpetrate insurance fraud? A delightfully
bizarre inside joke concerns the "Darwin Awards," which
celebrate those who improve the human gene pool by removing
themselves from it, like the young man who attempts to break
the land speed record by attaching a couple of rockets to his
'82 El Camino and ends up splattered on a cliff face hundreds
of feet above the highway. In the course of the novel, Darwin
investigates several accident scenes that duplicate either
Darwin Award-winning demises or urban legends. A breezy
writing style, rollicking humor and ingenious descriptions of
weird accidents make this action-packed thriller a real
winner. (Nov.)
Amazon.com Review
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.