
As addictive as Lee Child & as explosive as Michael Connelly
- WANTED is the new thriller from Robert Crais & a NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER Seventeen-year-old Tyson is a normal teenaged boy
- he's socially awkward obsessed with video games & always hungry But his mother is worried that her sweet nerdy son has started to change & she's just found a 40000 Rolex watch under his bed Suddenly very frightened that Tyson has gotten involved in something illegal his mother gets in touch with a private investigator named Elvis Cole & asks him to do some digging Cole uncovers a connection between Tyson & eighteen unsolved burglaries in LA's ritziest neighbourhood Tyson spooks & runs & then people start dying Robert Crais' books have been published in a staggering 62 countries & are bestsellers around the world He began his career writing for classic crime & police shows like Hill Street Blues Cagney & Lacey Miami Vice & LA Law He is a Grand Master of the Mystery Writers of America PRAISE for THE WANTED ' Cleverly plotted stylishly written another rewarding page-turner by one of the most reliable storytellers in modern crime fiction' Washington Post ' Los Angeles ace Crais extends his streak of sharp enjoyable thrillers' Kirkus ' Gripping The Wanted is a relentless thriller I found myself engrossed by two terrible
- but remarkably compelling
- villains a welcome literary gift from a master of the craft' Huff Post Taut expertly crafted' Publishers Weekly' An absolute must read' Mystery Tribune PRAISE for ROBERT CRAIS ' In Crais a new star has appeared on the priovate eye scene
- a dazzling first novel'-Tony Hillerman on The Monkey's Raincoat ' Far & away the most satisfying private eye novel in years Grab this one
- it's a winner!'-Lawrence Block on The Monkey's Raincoat ' Taken is intense & fast-paced & reads like a big-budget Hollywood blockbuster!'-CNN 'A tale of one man's bare-knuckled search for redemption Like the best LA noir writers Crais nudges the mystery genre into higher gear tackling grand themes in exceedingly personal ways through flawed heroes & hard-to-spot villains'- LA Times Book Review on The Two Minute Rule