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Night Fall

Night Fall

List Price: $26.95
Your Price: $16.17
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Eh
Review: "Thriller" based on the TWA #800 disaster off the coast of Long Island. You could wait for the mass-market version or you could skip it entirely. I recommend the latter.


Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Night Fall - A Disappointment
Review: After reading "Plum Island" and "Upcountry," this book was a real disappointment. The characters are weakly drawn, the plot challenges any concept of verisimilitude (is there any reason why the FBI and CIA would conspire to hide the truth of TWA Flt. 800's crash?) and the ending (the idea for which the author attributes to his son) is a total copout.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: You need not be a conspiracy theorist to enjoy Nightfall
Review: DeMille resumes his entertaining John Corey series with Nightfall . Corey, the ex-NYPD detective, is now working on an FBI anti-terror taskforce as a contract employee. In the summer of 2001, he and his wife Kate attend a memorial service honoring the fifth anniversary of TWA Flight 800, which ended minutes after takeoff in a catastrophic explosion that took all 230 lives aboard.

Despite hundreds of eyewitness accounts that stated something resembling a surface-to-air rocket had touched off the explosion, hundreds of FBI agents, NTSB personnel, and other governmental parties came to the conclusion that an internal spark had triggered an explosion in the central fuel tank. Having investigated the original incident, Corey's FBI agent wife is fed up with the apparent stonewalling and clues her husband onto an interesting, and not widely known, fact regarding the investigation.

A couple was apparently videotaping themselves during a risque frolic in the surf when the explosion occurred. Some investigators believe that their videotape captured the crucial events. One problem: the couple disappeared, most likely because they were adulterers, and there's no way to identify the pair other than a lens cap left on a beach blanket.

Corey doggedly pursues the investigation in an entirely unofficial manner and is quickly confronted with resistance from his administrators. Some top-level officials don't want him turning over any rocks and unearthing more details. And they're willing to take extreme measures to make sure he doesn't pursue the investigation.

As other reviewers have noted, the plot lags towards the middle of the book. But few other authors have mastered sarcastic, entertaining patter in quite the way DeMille has (although Raymond Chandler comes to mind). When Corey arranges to meet an old partner at a Chinese restaurant, he describes the scene:

"They were prepping the day's mystery dishes in the kitchen, and I thought I heard a cat, a dog, and a duck, followed by chopping sounds, then silence. Smelled good, though."

Despite a sluggish plot here and there, Corey is a consistently entertaining character and the mystery of Flight 800 is compelling. In fact, I suspect every person who reads this book will be googling the topic upon finishing the book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great read but I want a better ending
Review: Great read as all of DeMille's books are. Yeah, so he writes with similar styles book after book. Still, the best ones were his early ones like Charm School and Gold Coast. I thought Plum Island was mediocre and this was better.

Great mix between fact and fiction - I still don't know what really happened. Have never read a book that mixed the lines so clearly so you never know what is and isn't.

I recommend it - heck i finished it in 5 hours on a plane. Quick reading for sure.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: RIP Nelson Demille
Review: I rarely write reviews, but this book was such an unexpectedly awful and excruciately boring novel by someone who was once the best in the business that I can't help myself. After the uncomparable duo of "Plum Island" and "The Lions Game," the former containing a truly interesting, engrossing, and clever mystery and the latter including some of the most intense action scenes in modern thriller writing, I'm beyond disappointed that DeMille has written two novels in a row, the other being "Up Country," that lack action and suspense and basically involve main characters walking around, looking at things, and asking questions during endless conversations. Those are important components of this type of novel but, as DeMille proved with "Plum Island" and Michael Connelly establishes every time he writes a Bosch book, investigative interviews can effectively be combined with action and suspense scenes to create a superior novel. DeMille has lost that in his most recent works.

"Night Fall" contains mostly dialogue. And make no mistake, DeMille has not lost his excellent ear for realistic dialogue. I'd have given the book two stars alone for the dialogue, but I deducted a star because the dialogue basically involves the same topic and it gets tedious and redundant despite its overall quality. The tediousness and redunancy is excacerbated by the fact that the focus of Corey's investigation is no mystery to anyone who reads the first chapter -- we know the couple's names, what they filmed and saw, and pretty much what they did afterward within about ten pages. Roughly the next four hundred require us to follow Corey around as he slowly but surely learns what we already know. The book has very little to do with the who, how, and why of the TWA 800 incident and more to do with a beach blanket, hotel records, a lens cap, and a video. Why oh why did Demille have to describe for us what the couple saw, then what the tape showed, then have Jill Winslow descibe what the tape showed, and then have Corey watch the tape several times so we could have it described to us several more times, including a strange moment involving Corey, Winslow, and the tape's prefatory sex scene. Couldn't he have been clearer regarding who did it and why and how instead of making sure that he rehashed the tapes's contents four or five times?

I finished this novel only because it's DeMille and he's only let me down once before. I was hoping for a nice payoff in the last hundred pages that would make slogging through the first 350 or so of conversations worth the price of admission to the good stuff. Boy was that a mistake and a waste of time. None of the questions and mysteries raised by the novel are resolved in any way and the book doesn't get interesting for even a second. There's more talking and more talking and Jill meets Kate and they talk and Corey and Jill have themselves a nice little time together in the city and talk and eat and shop and and the only potentially tense scene is described third-hand by Fanelli while he talks to Corey and then is described again third-hand by Kate as she talks to Corey. Worse yet, at this point Corey's investigation is over but people are still just talking and reflecting and ruminating, the sort of stuff that generally happens after a novel's climax to draw out the book a little and bring it to a smooth close. I guess I missed this book's climax, if there was one. Another reader described despair as the reader noticed that DeMille was running out of pages to bring the novel to a satisfying and legitimate close. I completely agree. I was appalled to see that, ten pages before the end, people were still talking and nothing else was happening. At that point, I got a sickening feeling that DeMille was about to betray me and can the ending that he had been building up to. The book's denouement, which would already have been thin, hurried, and not worthy of the slow build-up because DeMille had run out of book, instead never occurs. That is why not a single issue, question, or mystery raised by the book are resolved, why this was one of the worst "thriller or suspense" novels I've ever read, and why I will not read DeMille again and allow him to waste my time.

This book could partially be redeemed by a sequel. But according to DeMille's website, he's working on yet another government agent/terrorist novel that will have nothing to do with "Night Fall." I won't read that one, or any future DeMille novels, because stories that contain nothing but dialogue and omit action and suspense are meant for the screen and stage and do not translate well into a 500-page novel. Sorry Nelson.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: RIP Nelson Demille...Part 2
Review: I totally agree with harleys review....As a fan of Demille's books and have read em all, this one really stinks....I was disappointed with his last book, Up Country, and this one is no better....It's basically Corey walking around, finding clues that the whole FBI could'nt find. He's conviently shipped to Yemen, and the ending is very predictable. This book feels like he just putting out any crap based on his previous works....Plum Island and the Lion's game the best of his writing. I will not by his next book simply because it's a Demille book. Very poor effort, Nelson, try harder next time

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: On the fence with this one...
Review: In this review I will just tell you what I liked and disliked about Nelson DeMille's `NIGHT FALL' and you can decide whether or not you are interested from there.
Many peoples major gripe with this book was the ending; however a little more than halfway through I realized that it really couldn't end any other way. In keeping with the format of the rest of the book, which was pretty much reiterating the facts while throwing in a few fictional twists, I knew that DeMille wasn't going to provide us with all of the answers because there were none. And while I will say that I had a pretty good idea of how it was going to end by the time I'd reached book three I was still very interested and pleased with the way DeMille handled the inevitable turn his novel was taking. In other words the ending didn't bother me as much as it seemed to have other reviewers. What did bother me about this book was basically the entire middle section. I found it to lack much of the intrigue of the first few chapters and just continued to loose steam until book three where, contrary to popular opinion, I felt that it began to pick back up. Another problem that I had with `NIGHT FALL' was DeMille's writing style; I found it to be overly simplistic making his characters loose some depth. I wasn't able to see much in the main character, John Corey besides his wisecracking personality and his vast dislike for the people he worked with.
With that said `NIGHT FALL' was a quick read not tedious at all and could be something you would want to indulge in over a weekend or while traveling. As I said I have mixed feelings about this book but if you are into conspiracy theories and such you may just want to give this one a try. However if suspense novels are not really your thing, but you were thinking of trying this one out you may want to look somewhere else because this is probably not the novel for you.


Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Exciting and fast paced
Review: Night Fall is the first Nelson Demille novel that I have read and I found it to be very good.

It is based on the real life event. On 17 July 1996, a Boeing 747, TWA Flight 800, departed New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport bound for Paris. Approximately twelve minutes later, it exploded in mid air just off of Long Island. Reports have indicated that at least 270 people supposedly witnessed objects streaking toward the aircraft. FAA radar operators in New York also witnessed an unknown object `merging' with the aircraft just prior to the crash. After an extensive investigation the government concluded that it was the result of a mechanical failure.

Demille's story features an FBI agent, Kate Mayfield, who is not satisfied with the official outcome. Five years after the crash she attends an annual memorial service for the victims of Flight 800 with her husband, John Corey. He is a former NYPD detective and currently working as a contract agent on the same anti terrorist task force as his wife.

Mayfield mentions some of her concerns to Corey. Then, while they are at the memorial service, another FBI agent Liam Griffith warns Corey off. This threat gets Corey very interested in the case and he starts looking into it.

During the course of the story, intense pressure is put on Corey to cease his extra curricular efforts. In spite of all of it, he doggedly pursues the case.

In the latter part of the book, the action gets very intense. It develops into a story that is hard to put down. I thought that the ending was pretty weak, however, the overall story is exciting and fast paced.

I would recommend it.


Rating: 4 stars
Summary: What Destroyed Flight 800?
Review: The official report was that TWA Flight 800 was destroyed by an electrical spark in a gas tank. But rumors persist that some people saw a fiery track rise from the ocean and hit the airliner. On July 17, 2001, John Corey and Kate Mayfield, husband and wife, and both members of the FBI's Anti-Terrorist Task Force, attend a memorial sevice for the people that died in the tragedy. They are disturbed by the many reports of a missile, so they launch an off-hours investigation into the reports. This gets strong orders from their bosses to stop, but they continue, and we see them slowly uncover fact after fact, as they move closer to the truth and to mortal danger for themselves. The last quarter of the book becomes very intense, and Demille makes the best choice for a climax, although he passes up a chance to make the ending more exciting. Night Fall is not as exciting as Demille's The Lion's Game, but it is well-worth reading.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "You talkin' to me"
Review: Travis Bickell's line in "Taxi" reminds me (or vice versa) of the character of John Corey. He's a wounded Irish cop with an attitude. He's 40 years old, with an attitude. He's a loving, humorous husband, with an attitude. And here, his Godfather Nelson DeMille gives him an already laid table upon which to have an attitude.

He actually is moved and bored by the 2001 memorial service to the deaths of 230 people aboard TWA Flight 800 into the ocean just south of Cupsogue Beach on Long Island. He's not moved by patriotism (well a little; we know that from the Corey mystique) and if there's a dry eye in the crowd it ain't Corey's. He's there to accompany his wife, FBI Agent Kate Mayfield, who worked the case five years earlier. He really doesn't care. What are the Yanks doing? Will Mrs. Corey favor him with marital bliss before they go home? These are the important issues in his life. Maybe some Scotch as well.

That is until Liam Griffith, mean spirited FBI agent, gets in John's face after the service and says to get the heck out of Dodge, that it's none of his business and if he and his wife continue to 'poke around,' there in deep trouble. And John, from the neck down, face flushed, muscles tightening, says, "You talkin' to me."

I like John Corey. He's a great character. He's relentless, irreverant, courageous, focused and faithful. He's a lot like Spenser and Elvis Cole and Joe Pike, but John has a level of dysfunction that's refreshing, because it reminds us of . . . . us.

He's still angry at his wife for dalliances she "might" have had BEFORE she met him. As my younger friends say, "I'm down with that."

So I think Kate is masterful at bringing John to the service. She just lets it flow, because she figures out what will happen. She's Ms. Procedure, "the company (FBI) line" but she knows that her old man is truly a loose cannon. And she has her own misgivings about the investigation of TWA 800's demise.

So that's about it. I didn't tell you much of the facts but you already know them. I think the sex between the couple on the beach, Bud Mitchell and Jill Winslow, is just a little too graphic but frankly, I thought the development of the two of them, having started to be one dimensional, to eventually be quite deep.

This is too long but let me add one other point for the DeMille-o-philes (like myself). What's the best? Charm School? The Daughter? Word of Honor? Take your pick. This is right up there. Larry Scantlebury. 5 stars.


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