Gripping, sinister, and so chillingly possible that only a true Washington insider could have written it. The talented Rosenstiel brings his reporter’s clarity and insight to this twisty and provocative thriller exposing the darkest side of politics.” — Hank Phillippi Ryan, author of Trust Me
“Smart, assured and perfectly attuned to today’s toxic politics, The Good Lie hurtles along with the insider excitement of a tell-all Washington blockbuster.” — Dan Fesperman, author of Safe Houses
Gripping, sinister, and so chillingly possible that only a true Washington insider could have written it. The talented Rosenstiel brings his reporter’s clarity and insight to this twisty and provocative thriller exposing the darkest side of politics.
12/03/2018
In this taut, convincing follow-up to 2017’s well-received Shining City, Rosenstiel, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institute, takes the reader through the corridors of power of the nation’s capital with the surety of a Washington insider. When Gen. Brian Roderick dies in a terrorist attack on an American diplomatic outpost in Oosay City in the Republic of Morat, North Africa, President James Barlow Nash enlists the help of political fixer Peter Rena, a former Special Forces military investigator, to get to the truth, political consequences be damned. Unfortunately for Rena and his partner, Randi Brooks, they are stonewalled by the surviving victims of the attack, as well as high-placed government officials, with congressional committees and hotshot reporters eager to expose whoever is responsible on Rena and Randi’s flanks. As Rena gets closer to solving the crime, he must confront the uncomfortable possibility that the cover-up might just be the proper course of action to prevent far greater calamity. Political thriller fans will be more than satisfied. Agent: David Black, Black Agency. (Feb.)
Smart, assured and perfectly attuned to today’s toxic politics, The Good Lie hurtles along with the insider excitement of a tell-all Washington blockbuster.
More than anyone, it’s up to narrator David Colacci—not the protagonists—to keep the many characters in this political thriller straight for listeners. As the characters come and go, subterfuge is taking place at the highest levels in Washington. Colacci does a decent job as political fixers Peter Rena and Randi Brooks are charged with getting to the bottom of a deadly attack. He excels at women’s voices because he isn’t just raising his pitch an octave or two. Brooks is given a flattened and annoyed tone, while Rena’s girlfriend sounds calm and soothing. An editor has a slight East Coast accent that differentiates him from everyone else in the room. This audiobook offers a solid plot from an author who knows his stuff, but pay attention to the characters as they’re introduced. M.B. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine
More than anyone, it’s up to narrator David Colacci—not the protagonists—to keep the many characters in this political thriller straight for listeners. As the characters come and go, subterfuge is taking place at the highest levels in Washington. Colacci does a decent job as political fixers Peter Rena and Randi Brooks are charged with getting to the bottom of a deadly attack. He excels at women’s voices because he isn’t just raising his pitch an octave or two. Brooks is given a flattened and annoyed tone, while Rena’s girlfriend sounds calm and soothing. An editor has a slight East Coast accent that differentiates him from everyone else in the room. This audiobook offers a solid plot from an author who knows his stuff, but pay attention to the characters as they’re introduced. M.B. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine
2018-11-13
Two Washington fixers try to uncover the facts behind a military and diplomatic disaster in Africa.
When the U.S. mission in Oosay, Morat, a North African Islamic hot spot, is overrun and destroyed and "renegade" Gen. Brian Roderick is killed, Peter Rena and Randi Brooks, partners in a research consultancy that offers a variety of services, are asked by the president to find out what really happened. The president's questions about the incident have been only partially answered by his advisers and appointees, and the outsiders are seen as an alternate path to the truth. Rena, Brooks, and their researchers get right to work but find themselves stymied wherever they turn. The director of the CIA will not meet with them; representatives of the National Security Agency, Defense Intelligence Agency, and the military muddy the water; some of the surviving personnel on duty in Oosay have disappeared, and the ones who can be located stonewall the investigators. In a gesture more political than practical, an opportunistic congressman manages to convene a committee of inquiry, adding immediacy to the partners' activity. Video footage taken by a drone is discovered and, after much intrigue, eventually viewed by Rena and Brooks, but the video raises as many questions as it answers. What dire truth animates such a coverup? Rena and Brooks persevere, confronting falsehoods and pulling what strings they can to get to the answer. But while the novel provides a realistic and informative portrait of the various ways political, military, diplomatic, and administrative interests compete and interact, it is not a very thrilling thriller. Rena and Brooks are dogged and clever, but most of the rest of the characters are types, and the dangers of secrecy and ambition never seem particularly menacing.
A valuable exploration of the vagaries of power and influence but not always a compelling tale.