Reviews for Turbulence

by Stuart Woods

Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

Nominally an attorney, Stone Barrington spends most of his time enjoying life as a bon vivant. In this forty-sixth installment in the phenomenally long-running series, Stone is never without ample supplies of high-end Scotch and female companionship, whether he is waiting out hurricanes in his newly fortified Florida manse or visiting his well-stocked homes in New York and Europe. Breaking up his hedonistic routine, Stone occasionally accepts, though usually reluctantly, the odd Bondian assignment. This time he agrees to help the U.S. government stop arms dealer Selwyn Owaki from completing a sale that could cost thousands of lives. Stone rises to the occasion, of course, using his international connections and bullet-proof charm to stop the bad guy and return unscathed to the good life. In the post-James Bond era, the prolific Woods has claimed the luxury suspense subgenre as his own.--Karen Keefe Copyright 2018 Booklist


Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

The approach of Hurricane Irma raises the tension early in bestseller Woods's 46th novel featuring lawyer Stone Barrington (after Shoot First) as Stone and friends, including Secretary of State Holly Barker, hunker down at his house in Key West, Fla. Joe Box, the junior senator from Florida, who two months earlier tried to assault Holly after a White House dinner, briefly takes shelter with Stone. Once the storm passes and Stone is able to leave the island in his private plane, the plot centers on the efforts of American and British authorities to arrest Selwyn Owaki, a notorious arms dealer with ties to Box. When an attempt involving Stone to nab Owaki at a London restaurant goes awry, Stone becomes a target for some powerful people and must go on the run. The hunt for Owaki turns out to have surprisingly high political stakes, but, since the book's principal villain is barely seen and has a minimal backstory, some readers may feel cheated, despite the concluding fireworks. Author tour. Agent: Anne Sibbald, Janklow & Nesbit. (June) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

New York attorney/secret agent manqu Stone Barrington's latest takes him from a Category 5 hurricane to a rogue nuclear device, all without a single frisson of suspense.Wouldn't you know it? Stone's closed on his posh new digs in Key West just in time to welcome Hurricane Irma, which shutters the airport hours ahead of his planned departure. Every domicile on the island is damaged, but Stone's not so much; he loses electricity and cellphone reception, but a gasoline generator supplies power; so the worst effect of the storm is to bring Florida Sen. Joseph P. Box, whom Secretary of State Holly Barker, Stone's old friend and lover, has privately accused of unusually forthright sexual harassment, to his home, where Stone manfully shelters him until the storm blows over. Then it's on to man-made disaster. Box arranges bail for jailed arms dealer Selwyn Owaki, whom Stone helped put away last time around (Shoot First, 2018), and when Owaki instantly flees the country, CIA chief Lance Cabot enlists Stone's help in crashing a private dinner Owaki's set up in London with Box in order to prevent a nuclear device in Owaki's possession from falling into even worse hands. Stone's not eager to help, and even less eager when he hears that gunplay may feature in the evening's entertainment. But urged on by his latest inamorata, model Kelly Smith, he agrees to be the agency's inside man for this one night and then watches events spiral out of control. The upshot sends Kelly and Stone to Stone's house in Paris and then to Zurich, back to Stone's house in London, which serves as his home base for another abortive shot at Owaki, back to Stone's house in Key West, and back again to London in pursuit of Owaki. Fans may see a pattern here.Woods' consumerist hero doesn't purchase any new real estate this time out, but he does qualify to fly another new aircraft. Plus, that nuclear device doesn't explode. Nice. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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