Live wire

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#1 New York Times bestselling author Harlan Coben proves once again that "nobody writes them better" in a thriller that asks a provocative question: Is a pretty lie better than the ugly truth? Harlan Coben published his first Myron Bolitar thriller, Deal Breaker, in 1995, introducing a hero that would captivate millions. Over the years we have watched Myron walk a tight rope between sports agent, friend, problem solver and private eye, his big heart quick to defend his client's interests so fiercely that he can't help but jump in to save them, no matter the cost. When former tennis star Suzze T and her rock star husband, Lex, encounter an anonymous Facebook post questioning the paternity of their unborn child, Lex runs off, and Suzze - at eight months pregnant - asks Myron to save her marriage, and perhaps her husband's life. But when he finds Lex, he also finds someone he wasn't looking for: his sister-in-law, Kitty, who along with Myron's brother abandoned the Bolitar family long ago. As Myron races to locate his missing brother while their father clings to life, he must face the lies that led to the estrangement - including the ones told by Myron himself. If we thought we knew Myron Bolitar, Coben now proves we didn't. An electric, stay-up-all night thriller that unfolds at a breakneck pace, Live Wire proves that Harlan Coben still has the ability to shock us anew. *Associated Press

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ISBN
9780525952060
9781101476161
9781409150589
9781410432957
9781441895271
UPC
9781441895271

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Also in this Series

  • Deal breaker (Myron Bolitar mysteries Volume 1) Cover
  • Drop shot: a Myron Bolitar novel (Myron Bolitar mysteries Volume 2) Cover
  • Fade Away (Myron Bolitar mysteries Volume 3) Cover
  • Back Spin (Myron Bolitar mysteries Volume 4) Cover
  • One false move (Myron Bolitar mysteries Volume 5) Cover
  • The final detail: a Myron Bolitar novel (Myron Bolitar mysteries Volume 6) Cover
  • Darkest Fear (Myron Bolitar mysteries Volume 7) Cover
  • Promise me (Myron Bolitar mysteries Volume 8) Cover
  • Long lost (Myron Bolitar mysteries Volume 9) Cover
  • Live wire (Myron Bolitar mysteries Volume 10) Cover
  • Home (Myron Bolitar mysteries Volume 11) Cover
  • Think twice (Myron Bolitar mysteries Volume 12) Cover

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Similar Series From Novelist

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for series you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Hardboiled fiction fans will enjoy these fast-paced series that chronicle the dangerous cases of a private investigator (Ashe Cayne) or sports agent (Myron Bolitar). -- CJ Connor
These suspenseful and compelling hardboiled fiction series star amateur detectives who are both former athletes. Intricate plots and fast-paced scenarios detail the efforts of sympathetic male leads, hell-bent on finding justice for folks who ask for their help. -- Andrienne Cruz
Though former cop August Snow has more crime-fighting experience than sports agent Myron Bolitar, both doggedly pursue a variety of tough and complex cases in these gritty, hardboiled series. -- Stephen Ashley
These fast-paced hardboiled fiction series star wisecracking amateur detectives -- social worker Stella Hardy and sports agent Myron Bolitar. Readers will find plenty to enjoy in these compelling mysteries led by sympathetic and hard-nosed leads with a heart of gold. -- Andrienne Cruz
Though Aaron Gunner focuses more on racial and social justice issues than Myron Bolitar, both gritty hardboiled series star complex crime solvers determined to uncover the truth behind a bevy of compelling cases. -- Stephen Ashley
Sports agent Myron Bolitar and lawyer Stone Barrington are good-looking, likeable, and charismatic protagonists who shifted careers due to a bad knee injury; both investigate criminal cases for wealthy clients. Each series is fast-paced, suspenseful, and intricately plotted. -- Andrienne Cruz
These gritty mystery series are full of complex, dangerous cases and plenty of intrigue. Joe King Oliver is a ruthless private investigator, while Myron Bolitar is a crime-solving sports agent. -- Stephen Ashley
Readers looking for a gritty mystery series that doesn't shy away from disturbing details should check out these compelling reads. Blue Mumbai is a police procedural, while Myron Bolitar stars a crime-solving sports agent. -- Stephen Ashley
Though police chief Koa Kane has more experience investigating crime than sports agent Myron Bolitar, both find themselves pulled into complex cases in these hardboiled series. Koa Kane focuses more on scene setting, while Myron Bolitar has more disturbing detail. -- Stephen Ashley

Similar Titles From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
These books have the genres "hardboiled fiction" and "adult books for young adults"; and the subjects "missing persons investigation," "private investigators," and "deception."
Let it burn - Hamilton, Steve
These books have the appeal factors disturbing and bleak, and they have the genres "hardboiled fiction" and "mysteries"; and the subjects "private investigators," "former police," and "murder suspects."
NoveList recommends "Blue Mumbai novels" for fans of "Myron Bolitar mysteries". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Ashe Cayne novels" for fans of "Myron Bolitar mysteries". Check out the first book in the series.
These books have the genres "hardboiled fiction" and "mysteries"; and the subject "missing persons investigation."
NoveList recommends "King Oliver novels" for fans of "Myron Bolitar mysteries". Check out the first book in the series.
Starring men successful in their chosen careers whose eccentric sidekicks provide uniquely valuable assistance, these humorous mysteries are sharp-tongued and fast-paced. While sex is present in both, there's a lot more of it in Unnatural Acts. -- Shauna Griffin
These books have the genres "hardboiled fiction" and "mysteries"; and the subjects "missing men," "missing persons investigation," and "former police."
NoveList recommends "August Snow novels" for fans of "Myron Bolitar mysteries". Check out the first book in the series.
These gritty hardboiled mysteries feature vanished family members, private investigators with a past, and evocative settings in New York City. Menacing and moody, both tales ask, "Isn't it sometimes better that missing persons stay missing?" -- Mike Nilsson
These books have the genres "mysteries" and "adult books for young adults"; and the subject "brothers."
NoveList recommends "Stone Barrington novels" for fans of "Myron Bolitar mysteries". Check out the first book in the series.

Similar Authors From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Like Harlan Coben, Don Winslow writes both suspense and mystery novels. Winslow's suspense is a little lighter in tone, but both authors create intriguing, sympathetic characters and quick, clever storylines. Winslow's mysteries are complicated and satisfactorily resolved, with plenty of snappy dialogue and humor, though they focus more on character than plot. -- Shauna Griffin
Both Thomas Perry and Harlan Coben's plots twist and turn and twist again with endings that often leave the reader breathless. Their works feature ordinary people faced with unexpected and devastating problems. -- Katherine Johnson
Both Gregg Hurwitz and Harlan Coben write compelling, often violent, tales of suspense featuring innocent, everyman protagonists placed in nightmare situations from which they must extricate themselves and their families. A breakneck pace drives these tales of secrets and revenge. -- Joyce Saricks
Sean Doolittle and Harlan Coben write standalone suspense stories that feature good people in trouble. The complex stories are character-driven and show how good people, by their poor choices, become entangled in murder. The stories are dark in tone and filled with action and violence. The suspense builds dramatically. -- Merle Jacob
Kathy Reichs and Harlan Coben write fast-paced, action-packed adult mysteries. Both authors have also created spin-off teen mystery series loosely related to their adult books. Though Reich's teen works tend more toward science fiction, teen protagonists confront danger at every turn in both authors' compelling, suspenseful books. -- Kelly White
Breakneck pacing, crafty characters, and twisting plots are three things readers of both Stuart Woods' mysteries and Harlan Coben's suspense novels will enjoy. -- Shauna Griffin
Sparkle Hayter's mysteries, which star hapless, saucy tabloid news reporter Robin Hudson, are lighter in tone than Harlen Coben's mysteries and have a little more exposition and description, but move quickly nonetheless. Readers will be drawn in by the zany humor and eccentric characters. -- Shauna Griffin
Readers who enjoy memorable characters and swiftly moving and engaging plots will find enjoy Harlan Coben and Brian Freeman's books. -- Shauna Griffin
Both Alison Gaylin and Harlan Coben write compelling, suspenseful tales of ordinary people caught up in terrible circumstances that, while out of the ordinary, somehow feel all too plausible. -- Shauna Griffin

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Coben, who has perfected the techno-thriller, in which social media tools are used in ingeniously devious ways (Hold Tight, 2008), has won the trifecta of mystery awards: the Edgar, the Shamus, and the Anthony and is the only writer to have such a clutch at his command. Here, he returns to his humble roots and resurrects his sports agent and sleuth Myron Bolitar, who appeared in Coben's debut, Deal Breaker, in 1995, and has starred in nine other novels. Coben may be a little too fond of Bolitar; over the years, he has transformed him from a struggling New Jersey sports agent to a wildly successful superagent who handles all forms of entertainment and, bad news for the reader, is now given to self-indulgent introspection, rumination, and endless dialogue with his sidekick, Win. This overwriting changes the Bolitar novel from spare and lively to a flabby 350-plus pager. A prime example of this work's need for a less-indulgent author (or editor) is the cringe-inducing scene in which Win appears with two Asian beauties, named Mee and Yu. Bolitar and Win carry on with sophomoric puns and a forecast of sexual activity that is supposed to be hilarious but reads as incredibly insensitive. The plot is fairly standard, involving a client whose husband disappears, with a link to Bolitar's sister-in-law and estranged brother. Bracing action, a Coben staple, is bogged down by bloated writing. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Coben takes a literary misstep with his return to series character Myron Bolitar, but his name-brand status ensures an audience.--Fletcher, Connie Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

It's no surprise that Steven Weber, a familiar TV presence (Wings, Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip) who specializes in glib, wisecracking characters, would be a perfect fit for both Coben's protagonist, witty sports superagent, Myron Bolitar, and his droll partner, the suave sociopath Windsor Horne Lockwood III. The investigation into the drug overdose death of a tennis star client takes a painfully personal turn for Myron. Along with the jokes, puns, and banter, the author puts his hero through the most grueling emotional roller-coaster of his 11-book story arc, with his estranged brother missing, his sister-in-law on heroin, his teenage offspring despising him, and his father suffering a possibly fatal heart attack. Weber handles Myron's mood swings and meditations effortlessly, matches Win's smugness and odd moments of friendship, and effectively creates a full cast of characters, including series regulars Esperanza, Big Cyndi, and the elder Bolitars, with vocal versatility. A Dutton hardcover. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
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Library Journal Review

Myron Bolitar, Coben's wisecracking sports agent and private eye, helps a former female tennis pro who is eight months pregnant defend the paternity of her unborn child. With his sidekick, Win, Myron has unexpected encounters with his estranged sister-in-law, who's entangled with rock stars, scandals, and drugs. Adding momentum to Myron's search, his dad suffers a life-threatening heart attack and asks to speak with Brad, his long-lost son. Along the way, Myron confronts his own buried secrets and recognizes that his abandoned sister-in-law and nephew interpret his big-heartedness as unwanted interference. A career-changing cliff-hanger ends his search. VERDICT In this tenth Bolitar mystery (after Long Lost), Coben reveals the introspective side of his slick character, as Myron tackles a different sort of hidden mysteries-those deeply embedded within himself and other family members. Fans will enjoy the change of focus and wonder how Coben will re-create his hero in his next adventure. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 10/1/10.]-Jerry P. Miller, Cambridge, MA (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Kirkus Book Review

A client's case of online harassment brings the chickens home to roost for agent Myron Bolitar and his whole family.Retired tennis star Suzze T (ne Trevantino) is so happy about her pregnancy that she can't understand why one of her virtual friends would post "NOT HIS" on her Facebook page. She swears that the father really is her husband Lex Ryder, the Australian-born rocker who's been the public face of the band HorsePower ever since a lurid scandal involving 16-year-old Alista Snow sent HorsePower front man Gabriel Wire into seclusion over a decade ago. Now Suzze wants Myron to unmask the false friend who questioned Lex's paternity and bring her runaway husband, who didn't take the rumor well at all, back home. It isn't long before Myron, frequently bailed out by his bionic preppy sidekick Win Lockwood, has identified the rogue poster. Instead of resolving Suzze's domestic problems, however, the revelation just drags Myron's own familyhis estranged brother Brad, Brad's wife Kitty and their son Mickeyinto them, along with another notable family, the mobbed-up Ache brothers. How deep can Myron dig without running afoul of fearsome Herman Ache? And how deep does he want to dig when the results threaten his own parents' peace of mind and his possible dtente with the brother he hasn't seen for 15 years?Despite the promise of dark family secrets, this is the most conventional of Myron's recent cases (Long Lost,2009, etc.), heavy with cheesy cliffhangers and eye-popping coincidences. Fans will be rewarded by the nonstop plot twists Coben must have patented.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

Coben, who has perfected the techno-thriller, in which social media tools are used in ingeniously devious ways (Hold Tight, 2008), has won the trifecta of mystery awards: the Edgar, the Shamus, and the Anthony—and is the only writer to have such a clutch at his command. Here, he returns to his humble roots and resurrects his sports agent and sleuth Myron Bolitar, who appeared in Coben's debut, Deal Breaker, in 1995, and has starred in nine other novels. Coben may be a little too fond of Bolitar; over the years, he has transformed him from a struggling New Jersey sports agent to a wildly successful superagent who handles all forms of entertainment and, bad news for the reader, is now given to self-indulgent introspection, rumination, and endless dialogue with his sidekick, Win. This overwriting changes the Bolitar novel from spare and lively to a flabby 350-plus pager. A prime example of this work's need for a less-indulgent author (or editor) is the cringe-inducing scene in which Win appears with two Asian beauties, named Mee and Yu. Bolitar and Win carry on with sophomoric puns and a forecast of sexual activity that is supposed to be hilarious but reads as incredibly insensitive. The plot is fairly standard, involving a client whose husband disappears, with a link to Bolitar's sister-in-law and estranged brother. Bracing action, a Coben staple, is bogged down by bloated writing. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Coben takes a literary misstep with his return to series character Myron Bolitar, but his name-brand status ensures an audience. Copyright 2011 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2011 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

Myron Bolitar, Coben's wisecracking sports agent and private eye, helps a former female tennis pro who is eight months pregnant defend the paternity of her unborn child. With his sidekick, Win, Myron has unexpected encounters with his estranged sister-in-law, who's entangled with rock stars, scandals, and drugs. Adding momentum to Myron's search, his dad suffers a life-threatening heart attack and asks to speak with Brad, his long-lost son. Along the way, Myron confronts his own buried secrets and recognizes that his abandoned sister-in-law and nephew interpret his big-heartedness as unwanted interference. A career-changing cliff-hanger ends his search. VERDICT In this tenth Bolitar mystery (after Long Lost), Coben reveals the introspective side of his slick character, as Myron tackles a different sort of hidden mysteries—those deeply embedded within himself and other family members. Fans will enjoy the change of focus and wonder how Coben will re-create his hero in his next adventure. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 10/1/10.]—Jerry P. Miller, Cambridge, MA

[Page 99]. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Edgar-winner Coben's 10th Myron Bolitar novel (after Long Lost) is a perfect 10: providing readers with new information about the past of the former athlete turned agent and owner of MB Reps; a satisfyingly complex mystery; and the always entertaining, sometimes shocking exploits of Bolitar's partner and friend, Windsor Horne Lockwood III (aka Win). Suzze Tervantino, a former tennis prodigy and one of Bolitar's first clients, visits his New York office and shows him a Facebook posting that suggests that her husband, rock star Lex Ryder, isn't the father of the child she's carrying. When Ryder, also a client of MB Reps, disappears, Suzze begs Bolitar to find him. In the process, Bolitar catches a glimpse of his sister-in-law, Kitty, at a crowded nightclub, and begins a search for her and his estranged younger brother, Brad, whom he hasn't seen for 16 years. This explosively fast thriller will leave fans clamoring for more. (Mar.)

[Page ]. Copyright 2010 PWxyz LLC

Copyright 2010 PWxyz LLC
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