Although Jump Cut is
the first addition to the series in almost ten years, it is Libby Hellmann’s fifth Ellie Foreman book. Ellie may be a decade older now than readers
remember her, but the Chicago-based video producer is as independent and tough
as she ever was. Most tellingly, she is
yet to buy into the old adage that curiosity has ended the lives of more than a
few curious cats. And now that the huge
aviation company for which she has been shooting a puff-piece promotional video
fires her before it is finished, Ellie is as curious as any cat has ever
been. But if she’s not very, very
careful she’s going to go the way of all those overly curious cats that
preceded her.
The more she thinks about it, the more certain Ellie is that
video shooting was halted because of one man whose image was prominently
captured in the preview footage she presented to Delcroft’s officers for
review. She knows that being fired by a
company of Delcroft’s stature will be bad for business, so Ellie is determined
to find out exactly why she was so rudely and aggressively cut loose by the
company. But when she arranges to meet
with the man whose presence in the video apparently doomed it, he dies only a
few feet from her. All she can salvage
from the scene is one expertly encrypted flash drive she now believes the dead
man intended to leave with her.
Libby Fischer Hellmann |
And now the real fun begins.
Ellie is not the only one who wants the information stored on that flash
drive because, as she learns, the dead man may have been working with the
Chinese to steal plans for the new anti-drone system technology Delcroft is in
the process of producing. So what do the
Delcroft people know about this supposed spy, and what is it about his appearance
in the video that makes someone there so desperately want to kill the whole
project? Ellie is determined to find the
answers – if only she manages to live long enough to do it. And she is not without a few assets of her
own, especially the friendship of two men (one of whom is her boyfriend Luke)
who have spent their lives working in various covert roles for the U.S.
government. Too, as would be expected,
Ellie’s “assets” have assets of their own, and they are willing to call in as
many favors as it takes to put them into play on Ellie’s behalf.
Jump Cut reads
like a story snatched from the headlines of the world we live in today, a world
in which war between governments is waged behind the scene to such a degree
that most of us only hear about them when they are all but over. Libby Hellmann definitely has a winner in Ellie
Foreman, so here’s hoping we don’t have to wait another ten years to hear from
Ellie again.
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