The New York Times starts its review of The Silent Man by Alex Berenson this way:
A novel can, and should, do many things, but a thriller need do only one. If it thrills, it succeeds, and if it does not, no matter how well it does everything else, it fails. Alex Berenson’s third novel, “The Silent Man,” succeeds in seizing the attention from the start and never letting go until the end.
I might want to argue with the first two sentences, or at least quibble a bit, but I think the review is right when it comes to Berenson’s latest book.
As we have discussed in our reviews of the previous John Wells novels (The Faithful Spy and The Ghost War), John Wells started out with an interesting hook (first Western spy to infiltrate Al Quada, convert to Islam, etc.) but hasn’t much developed beyond all round tough guy super spy. Not that he is a particularly one dimensional for the genre, just that he is typical of the genre.
What Berenson does well is set up a plausible terrorist attack or military threat and then start the clock on Wells’s attempt to keep it from happening. As the story plays out the pace quickens and the tension rises. And Berenson gives the reader the view from all sides; inside and out of the plot – minor and major characters. In the end you know Wells will save the day, but you don’t know how and how many people will die in between.
This time the focus is on a plot to smuggle a nuclear bomb into America and detonate it for maxim damage: at the State of the Union address. Character depth aside, Berenson again delivers an entertaining high stakes action thriller.







