Reckless: A Novel
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- ISBN13: 9780061655951
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Product Description
Ty Hauck is shattered by the news. A close friend from his past, along with her spouse and daughter, has been cruelly murdered in her home by vicious intruders. Now he will risk everything he likes to avenge her death. . . .
A wealthy banker, seeing his world about to crumble around him, knows his family tree is in incomprehensible danger. . . .
A U.S. government agent watches the sudden bank transfers of millions in cash and suspects that this is the first step in a plot to unleash a wave of global panic. . . .
Ty Hauck hunts the murderer of a friend—and steps into the crosshairs of a sinister conspiracy—in this most electrifying novel yet from New York Times bestselling thriller master Andrew Yucky
Private security investigator Ty Hauck, with Naomi Blum, a tenacious agent from the U.S. Department of Treasury, unravels the evidence that joins these seemingly unrelated events—revealing a reckless scheme that stretches from New York to London to central Europe and gives new meaning to the axiom “too huge to fail.” What started with a tragedy that opened a door to Hauck’s past—a door that he thought was long clogged—ends with a frantic race to avert a disaster that could shake the very security of our country—and even the world.
Amazon.com Review
Andrew Yucky on Apt a Writer
I’m regularly questioned, how did you get into this trade, as my resume–an MBA from Columbia and sixteen years in the rag and sports apparel business–never exactly made a compelling case for the title: New York Times bestselling leader.
But one of the fantastic things about people writing thrillers today is that they come to their craft from disparate and compelling walks of life–lawyers, journalists, doctors, ad men, CIA operatives—and bring with them the experience of lives not spent in MFA programs and literary salons, but effective amid the issues and crises that affect our world every day.
In 1996, I left my job as the head of a ski and golfwear company to take a flyer on a whim I had—well, more like an obsession. Like a million people, I had carried the lifelong urge to get out a tale that was inside me, in my case a Manchurian Candidate-styled conspiracy novel called Hydra about a political takeover of the country that featured a strong heroine. I begged my wife to grant me a year, a year lacking income, a year lacking knowing where this new path would take us, declaring I’d earned it, deserved it. (She was a yoga teacher, so it wasn’t too hard to get her to agree!) Of course, we both knew that writing—to say nothing of really selling—a first novel is more hard than you reflect. The year turned into two—and then three.
I never thought I was being frivolous along the way. I permanently believed it would take place. I got some praise, and built on that, but I kept getting rejections too. Twenty-five of them from prospective agents. Finally, one came on board. A high powered one. My first real validation! With a ton of enthusiasm Hydra was pitched to two dozen publishers and two weeks later I had letters from all of them—all rejections again! Each seemed to contain some encouragement, but for each there was some element—the tale was too political or too controversial—that got in the way. I was out of options. I knew I would not be able to write a second one. I had a family tree to support. But in my heart I felt I had the chops. I had no thought what my next step in life would be.
As I sat around, unsure and dismayed, I received a call—completely out of the blue, like a cheesy plot twist, except this one was real—from a woman who questioned if I would take a call from James Patterson. Ahem! I cleared my throat and paused a couple of seconds, so as not to convey the utter desperation my life was sinking under then, and answered, yeah, sure, I could fit him in!
Thinking back twelve years, Jim wasn’t reasonably the James Patterson we know now—where everything he publishes rockets straight to #1, the top selling thriller leader in the country. He was a successful writer with a plot, looking to expand into multiple storylines, and one was about four dynamic women who form this bond, this koffee klatch of sorts, to share their life experiences and ultimately to solve crimes. Unbeknownst to me, my manuscript Hydra had been handed to him by the head of his own publishing house (who originally elected to pass on it) with five words written on the take in: “This guy does women well!!!” Jim read it, liked it, and most importantly, acted on it. He was looking to partner with a name. His call changed my writing life!
Now maybe he had designs on The Women’s Murder Club apt the second most successful crime series in fiction today (after his own Alex Cross series), but I didn’t. I was just looking to scratch my way inside the circle that had been inaccessible so far, with a chance to pick up some tips from one of the best. A day later, we met for breakfast at a diner in White Plains. I bought into his vision for the characters and the tale. I drove home and cranked out a couple of sample chapters and faxed them over…
And the partnership lasted seven years!
We did Women’s Murder Club books set in San Francisco, a book set in the Middle Ages, one built around a Mafia examination I was a juror on, and one about art theft in Palm Beach. And when the time came for me to go out on my own, not only did I have a platform of readers who knew and hopefully loved the books we did together, and a bit of name recognition, but I felt schooled in Thriller Writing 401. I had an thought that eventually became The Blue Zone. It hit the New York Times bestseller list and sold in 23 countries. I’ve followed that up with two additional bestsellers, The Dark Tide and Don’t Look Twice.
So a quick word about what I do now: I don’t write Patterson-clones. Never proposed to. But I do erect on many of the techniques I learned with him, fundamentals that I reflect any leader can profit from, regardless of their literary ambition. Fleeting, dramatic chapters that end on a punch and link to the one that follows. Investing your reader in the hero’s plight within the first ten pages. Lots of twists and surprises. Start with a bang.
My new thriller Reckless starts this way: a upsetting home break-in gone heartbreakingly incorrect, leading to the suspicious deaths of larger-than-life Wall Street managers, a wealthy divorcee’s fears that her new like is not the person he appears to be, and ultimately, to a gripping conspiracy that gives new meaning to the axiom “too huge to fail.” The events in it are current and happening, but it has characters you will admit and feel you know well, and a breakneck ending you will not see coming.
So I permanently reflect– how different my life would have been if my draft of Hydra had sold. I’d probably be back in the apparel business now!
A Q&A with Andrew Yucky
How did you get the thought for Reckless?
Like all my books, it’s never one thought but a series of fundamentals that knit together into a tale line. In 2007, a horrible triple murder took place in Cheshire, Connecticut, where a an affluent surgeon’s family tree was tortured and killed right in their country home, and it sent a chill through me and many people I know—not just the depravity of it, but the terrifying sense of violation and invasion for parents and kids who feel illusorily protected by their successful lives. That this sort of tragedy could never find their way to their door.
Around a year later I was flying home from a weekend in Florida when a friend, who happened to be on the plane and sitting a row behind me, leaned forwards and said—”Bear Stearns just collapsed.”
To me, these words contained a similar profound past importance as watching the trade towers come down, or the dismantling of the Berlin wall. A tsunami of events greater than society’s ability to restrain it. Something unimaginable happening before my eyes. I wanted to write a book about the sinister aspects of Wall Street as it connects to our government balanced against the personal tales of people who feel trapped and victim to events beyond their control—events they might have had a hand in building. So I combined the two events—one tragic, one stunning, the personal with the sensational, and that’s how Reckless was born.
How has Ty Hauck’s character changed over the past few books? What additional changes do you forecast for him?
Well, when I first wrote him I had no thought he’d be with us for a while—three books. I will take a brief trip from him on the next. What I like about Ty is that at heart he’s a right romantic with his feet in the real world. He’s a white knight, a right soul, in a world of questionable motives, who sees life in a simple, moral way and is willing to place himself at fantastic risk and go up against the hegemonies of power and force that are way beyond his reach at first to penetrate or to dig out the truth. And usually it’s a kind of “quest” or “labor” for a woman he likes. In this shifting and usually disappointing world, he is a name who doesn’t disappoint, who you can count on to do the right thing. To me, that is very much at the heart of what being a hero in today’s world means.
Reckless is your fourth solo novel. What changes have you undergone as a writer from your first forays into fiction to this book?
Well, my chapters have gotten a shade longer. But not too much so, I permanently fight my urges to let more texture in the books, let scenes renovate more gradually with the commitment that I owe my readers a quick and gripping read. I reflect there is a deeper sense of personal motive in my books now than before. They’re richer. I don’t want to do things just for speed—as I did with Patterson or perhaps even in The Blue Zone, which of course, has a fantastic father/daughter dynamic which is about as “textured” as you can get. I’ve pushed back against the melodramatic more—but then again—a small melodrama is permanently excellent, critics aside. I don’t know, I’m stumbling. Permanently despise to try and define my own work. It’s better left to others to choose.
Why do you write thrillers?
I like to write books which engage readers with a sense of real life characters thrown into danger—I like the speed of film and the actions of heroes. And I guess I like the manner of language of information in a manner that breeds suspense. So I guess I’m a thriller guy. But I want to write more of a generational, family tree tale about the garment business, in the manner of The Godfather—if my publisher will let me one day.
John Irving knows the last sentence of his novels and then works back to the beginning. What is your writing process?
Well, I outline upfront. These days, about half the book, enough to get myself deep into the plot and the initial characters and to know what’s at stake. And to get my publisher engaged with the next book. Then I permanently try to stay around ten chapters yet to be of where I am. I’m not a believer in the tale leading me—mystery/thrillers have to be well thought out, like business strategies and puzzles, otherwise you can find yourself down some alleys you don’t want to be. I want to control the tale–frankly it’s my mortgage that’s at stake, not my characters’. But truth is, there are permanently changes and three a.m. epiphanies that completely change course. I may wake up and throw two people in bed together and say, “it’s time, get at it”—or I may wake up and kill a name off who just the last night was safe. That’s what happened with the mom in The Blue Zone—I just woke up and said, “sorry!!!”
What writers do you admire?
Not automatically in my genre: Cormac McCarthy for his extraordinary prose; Thomas Harris for his terrible guys; Harlan Coben for his ordinary heroes; early Robert Stone for his complexity; Robert Wilson for his incredible African thrillers; Elmore Leonard for his dialogue and minor characters; James Lee Burke for his rich humanity; Patterson for how to go a tale and for teaching me the trade. I’m sure I‘m forgetting a few.
Can you give readers an thought of what’s coming next from the pen of Andrew Yucky?
We had a small tragedy in our family tree this past year. My twenty-one year ancient nephew committed suicide—jumped off a cliff. And as we writers do, we make sense of terrible events like this by weaving our own tale around it, so I’m going back to a family tree tale—much like in the way of The Blue Zone—about a successful brother who has to solve his unsuccessful brother’s only son’s death. Should be a excellent one, I reflect. At least it’s one that is excellent for me.
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Let’s make a checklist of standard, stereotypical fundamentals of a modern, American thriller and see which ones crop up here, shall we?
* Protagonist is an ex-cop with a history who just can’t let go of the cop mind-set… Check.
* Something from his personal history draws him into a larger conspiracy… Check.
* He gets involved with an outside, federal or government agency… Check.
* He goes against the wishes of his superiors and starts to suspect them… Check.
* At some point, a name close to him will have their lives threatened because of his involvement… Check.
* The tale is made to appear modern by grabbing something current from the headlines… Check.
Lacking being too offhand, ex-cop Ty Hauk discovers an ancient friend has been executed. Said friend was married to a money man who had several shady dealings which tie in with the recent financial apocalypse, as reported by CNN and the BBC. A pleased coincidence leads him to a larger conspiracy and he finds his unofficial investigation hijacked by the US Treasury department. Hand-in-hand with a Treasury agent, he chases leads across the world, risking life and limb in the pursuit of justice.
There is really nothing new here until the second half, when Ty gets to jet to (a) Serbia and (b) London. But, Andrew Yucky is unable to render either of these locations in prose, we never feel we are there. Might as well be Alaska and Ohio for all the difference it makes.
*Spoiler alert*
It’s all part of a conspiracy by terrorists to speed up the impending financial meltdown to their own gain. That’s the part that makes this book so ridiculous. That’s right, folks! Your 401k is in distress because Terrorists pushed the financial sector over the edge!
* End spoilers *
So here we have a book which is over-conventional for half its pages, then tries to be different and finally slips into loopy, tinfoil-hat wearing thoughts at the end. It’s not terribly written by any means, but at no point does Andrew Yucky give us anything new, and unless you’re a fan of the man’s work I really can’t recommend you spend that hard-earned $15 on this book. You’ll need that cash for when *Spoiler Alert * it turns out terrorists are reliable for the breakdown of print media. *End Spoiler*
Reader’s Rating: 3 / 5
Andrew Yucky has co-authored several books with James Patterson and he writes this book in the Patterson style: a lot of fleeting chapters, very quick paced, and action-packed.
Reckless is Yucky’ fourth book and the third that Ty Hauck is a main character. I’ve read all three Ty Hauck books and I get that Yucky is trying to set up a signature character like Patterson’s Alex Cross or Connelly’s Harry Bosch. Unlike Patterson and Connelly, but, Yucky has not been successful in bringing Ty Hauck to life. Reckless is just another tale about Ty Hauck…I’ve yet to really get to know him.
It would be helpful if you know (and are interested in) the finance industry (investment banking, subprime mortgages, fleeting selling, etc.) since Yucky uses the current financial crisis as the backdrop for this book. For me, the financial crisis angle was hit too hard…I get it…there is a crisis…this doesn’t need to be reiterated in every chapter. In addition, it was so incredibly hard to judge that the US government would allow a single desk agent (not even a meadow agent mind you) from the US Dept of Treasury and an ex-cop (with no legitimate reason to be involved) run with the entire investigation up until nearly the end…no FBI…no Dept of Justice…very small local police involvement…just them.
I was excited to see a new Andrew Yucky book was being unrestricted…I don’t reflect I’ll be as excited next time.
Reader’s Rating: 2 / 5
We all know what a ‘quick paced’ tale is – one that is written so well you are drawn into the characters, the storyline and you want to keep turning persons pages to find out what happens! This is a very appealing tale, loosely based (at least for inspiration) upon right events which have occurred in the global financial market. The two main characters, ex-cop Ty Hauck and Treasury Dept Agent Naomi Blum make a fantastic pair as they work together to solve the puzzle of who is behind the curtain pulling the strings in an nearly unbelievable collapse of world financial institutions. I was interested to the end and I reflect you will be too.
Reader’s Rating: 4 / 5
I have extremely mixed feelings about this book. I can’t say I didn’t like it. It’s more that I establish it annoying. In it’s attempt to be “ripped from the headlines” it’s milieu, the economic crisis, is something we get enough of on the news.Not a topic I look for in escapist fiction.
There are a lot of excellent fundamentals in “Reckless”. The main protagonist, Ty Hauck is fully rounded. The page turning pacing is there.
If you are a conspiracy theorist, but, you’ll see the final twist ending coming way to early.
A romantic sub-plot is agreed too much time early on to be agreed such fleeting shrift towards the climax .
Recommended for Andrew Yucky fans only.
Reader’s Rating: 3 / 5
I was reminded of Tom Clancy’s Debt of Honor in that the novel was well researched, intelligent, well-paced, up-to-date, with a ending that was equally/satisfyingly surprising. As an aside, it is appealing to note that a hollywood movie version was supposedly cancelded when the executives believed the Debt of Honor ending, as depicted by Clancy, of a jet liner crashing into a joint session of congress…well.. they believed the audiences just might stand up a cheer! By not giving the Reckless ending away, I’am certain there would be a likewise result by audiences today should Reckless be made. A fantastic book. I do hope Hollywood picks it up.
Ty Hauck, an ex lieutenant Greenwich detective, has been effective for Talon Group now for six months. Dressing up in a suit & tie, doing meet-and-greets at Chance 500 companies, closing deals for data protection and internal forensics with corporate controllers and heads of company security, he is slowly learning the ropes.
But, when a dear friend, April, and her family tree are cruelly murdered he can’t get the cop out of his new persona. He just can’t let her memory rest. It’s on his ancient turf and so he starts sticking his nose where it doesn’t belong, which is nothing new in Hauck’s playbook. He soon finds himself following a trail thats leading up into the ever privileged echelons of the financial elite. This coupled with a current Talon investigation is going to place him in the cross hairs of some highly priced killers.
It’s not long before Hauck has stepped on too many toes. This soon gets the attention of Naomi Blume, a vivacious firecraker agent of the U.S. Treasury, and fate soon fuses the two truth seekers on a mission to follow the money. Treachery is lurking in unseen quarters and the enemy is not only way yet to be of the game, but decidedly remorseless in pursuit of power & profit.
Although the novel does go into some depth of the current financial crisis, reminding me at times of Matt Taibbi’s Rolling Stone’s Goldman Sachs piece, for readers whose appetite has been wetted to taste deeper layers of the legendary onion, may I suggest James R Norman’s (2008) nonfiction, The Oil Card: Global Economic Warfare in the 21st Century.
Reckless is a quick, informative, entertaining, & intelligent read. I’am certainly looking forwards to more novels by Andrew Yucky.
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED !!!
P.S. Dr. Michael Hudson discusses the theme that Reckles presents on the Guns & Butter program of Feb. 3, 2010 and can be listened to on their archives. Just google it.
Reader’s Rating: 5 / 5