Description:
  Fans of Thomas Perry's popular series featuring Jane Whitefield, the  Seneca Indian woman who helps people disappear (The Face-Changers, Shadow Woman, et al.) may be  disappointed when they discover that Death Benefits doesn't feature the  heroine who has won this writer so many new readers. But the disappointment  won't last longer than the first page of this intriguing and extremely        well-written new thriller, whose hero, John Walker, a data analyst for a large  insurance company, deserves a series of his own.   When a security man named Max Stillman plucks Walker out of the office pool and  dragoons him into investigating a fraud against the McClaren Life and Casualty, Walker's previously safe life takes a new and potentially dangerous  turn. As the pair begin searching for the missing employee, who signed off on  the huge (and phony) payoff of a death claim, and follow her to a grave in a  Midwestern wheat field, Walker discovers talents he never knew he had and a  thirst for vengeance. With the mysterious Stillman, he tracks the conspirators  to a New Hampshire village and an explosive and shocking conclusion to a fraud  that's much older than either of the men might have guessed. Like Don Winslow,  whose California Fire and  Life also focused on insurance fraud, Perry manages to make even the  dusty back corners of the corporate world a likely setting for mystery and  mayhem. This is a sharp, suspenseful, successful debut for a pair of unlikely  compatriots, marked by Perry's edgy, noirish style, lively dialogue, and superb  pacing. --Jane Adams
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