Nelson DeMille, Night Fall

Nelson DeMille, Night Fall

User reviews
4

Value For Money

write a review

Nelson DeMille, Night Fall

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here's how it works.

Nelson DeMille, Night Fall
5 1 user review
5100%
40%
30%
20%
10%
4

Value For Money

User Reviews

Harriet Klausner
4

Value For Money

Night Fall Nelson Demille Warner, Nov 20

Night Fall

Nelson DeMille

Warner, Nov 2004, $26.95, 483 pp.

ISBN: 0446576638

The night of July 17, 1996, on Cupsogue Beach, Long Island, Jill Winslow and Bud Mitchell videotape their reciprocated adulterous affair. As they begin to enjoy their illicit lovemaking, Jill, looking up from her prone position, notices a light rising towards a plane that abruptly explodes. Later they learn of the explosion of TWA Flight 800 over Long Island killing the 230 people on board.

Five years later, the Anti-Terrorist Task Force (ATTF) concludes mechanical malfunction though over two hundred credible people claimed they saw a rocket hit the plane. ATTF Agent Kate Mayfield, who made inquiries amongst the eye witnesses immediately after the explosion believes DC is covering up the truth though she has no idea. At a memorial service on July 17, 2001, she asks her spouse, former NYPD Detective John Corey, to investigate. As John begins questioning observers, he learns of the Winslow-Mitchell videotape that might show the rocket while the ATTF, CIA, FBI, NYPD, and a host of other alphabet types warn the duo to back off or else.

NIGHT FALL may prove to be the scariest thriller of the year as Nelson Demille provides a fictionalized account of the using a real tragedy and its subsequent investigation to paint one heck of a shocking tale. John is at his Die Hard John McClane cynical best (must be something about Johns) as he returns to investigate what his wife believes is a great cover-up. Fans will read it in one sitting in spite of the complexity and size of the novel, and the anticipated growing dismay that you know the conclusion about halfway into the novel as the calendar and the movie the Conversation haunt the reader

Harriet Klausner

1 - 1 of 1 items displayed
1

Q&A

There are no questions yet.