Travel writer Will Rhodes, for all his sophistication in the
ways of the world, is really a pretty clueless guy when we first meet him in
Chris Pavone’s The Travelers. Will spends many of his days sampling the
finest wines and tourist resorts the world has to offer those who can afford
the best. All he has to do in return is
turn his experiences into articles that his travel-magazine employer can
use. Simple enough, but one night in
Argentina, after a little too much of the wine, Will finds himself in bed with a
beautiful woman he could not resist despite his love for his wife of just four
years. Life is all about choices, Will
Rhodes, and that was a very bad one.
Because he so greatly fears what might happen to his
marriage if his secret is exposed to his wife, Will is easily forced into the
world of international espionage, a world he hardly imagined even existed
before his ill-fated encounter with the woman calling herself Elle. But dangerous as the new job might turn out to
be, Will tells himself that it is a win-win decision because now his wife will
never learn of his sexual encounter with Elle, and at least he is working for
the good guys (he hopes).
Author Chris Pavone |
Chris Pavone’s intricate and complicated plot is largely
narrated through the eyes of Will Rhodes, a man who at first appears to be in
way over his head. But, as time will
prove, Will is not just some dummy with social connections around the world. Piece by piece, layer by layer, Will begins
to make sense of what is happening around him, but what he uncovers often
leaves him more confused than before. It
is only when he has gathered enough pieces that Will begins to understand just
what a huge mess he has gotten himself into, a mess as likely to end his life
as it is to end his marriage.
What makes The
Travelers so much fun for (patient) readers is that they seldom know a
whole lot more about why things are happening than Will Rhodes knows. By the time
it all starts to make sense to him, readers are wholly invested in
Will’s well being, and are as prepared for the thriller’s rousing climax as
they hope Will Rhodes will be. As Will
himself put it, “…all of us (are) travelers, all on our way to someplace
else.”
It’s just that sometimes we don’t know where that “someplace
else” is until it’s too late.
(Review Copy provided by publisher)
(Review Copy provided by publisher)
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