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“Alex Kava has crafted…a winning character in Agent O’Dell.” —Washington Post Book World
Anonymous
Posted May 9, 2012
She tells a great story and keeps you reading non-stop can,t put down good, love her writting style, she is one of my favs. I have every book she has ever written.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 24, 2012
Although her first book was more intense, this book did keep me reading. I read the other reviews and almost didn't waste my time, but im very happy I did. Great book. Good twist, and good ending. I recommend reading!
I am planning on reading the rest of the "Maggie" series. Definately good reads!
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Kava's writing style isn't bad, but follow through is seriously lacking. The heroine is a big fat zero in the likability department. No suspense, nothing to keep you reading. This was my 2nd Kava book and it is my last.
1 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted March 7, 2008
I had never read an Alex Kava book before, but I do enjoy crime novels. This was just what I like...evil criminal, determined law enforecement, personal glimpses into the lives of the characters. It was hard to put down, and I found myself reading when I knew I only had time for just a page or two.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 3, 2008
This book really starts with a bang and the rest is so intriguing it's tough to put down. The amount of evil and depth of Stucky is fantastic, while Maggie is an equally strong character. A killer without a conscience - Stucky makes this an exceptional book. There's no excuse not to read this one!
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted December 30, 2006
I think Split Second is one of the most captivating books I've ever read.It is a spine tingling,bone chilling book! Just like A Perfect Evil& Necessary Evil!All of them fabulous like every other book written by Alex Kava!
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted August 10, 2002
To be fair to the author, Mira had given Sharon 'Alex' Kava only six months to produce this followup to A PERFECT EVIL. This, unfortunately, is typical of the publishing industry and its 'Strike while the iron is hot' mindset. <p> It's as obvious in SPLIT SECOND as it was in APE that Kava takes many of her cues from Thomas Harris and his now-legendary Hannibal Lecter series. Harris obviously benefited enormously from being able to take over a decade in writing HANNIBAL, while Kava's editor gave her only one twentieth the time. In fact, Kava had once told me that the first seventeen chapters were written in the first month alone. <p> Still, the so-called central theme of crossing the line separating good and evil in a 'split second' isn't addressed at any appreciable length until the last 60 or so pages of the book. It's a theme that Kava could've explored in a more provocative way even given the brevity of her publishing window, even if for no other reason than in justifying the title. <p> This is a fast read, with smooth pacing, and the return of Nick Morelli, perhaps the most incompetent sheriff in the annals of fiction, is nonetheless a comforting presence. However, many of the male characters, of which there are plenty, are cookie cutter constructs and I find it hard to believe that O'Dell would even still have a badge and a gun given her shrill, strident and paranoid nature throughout the book. AD Cunningham comes across as a washed-out version of Harris's Jack Crawford and Albert Stuckey, too, is a similarly generic serial killer, something that a hack would've created after reading a Writer's Digest book entitled HOW TO CREATE A SERIAL KILLER. <p> The conceit of a killer choosing victims in close proximity to the protagonist is a well-worn theme that has been better employed elsewhere. The denouement, also, is reminiscent of countless other serial killer thrillers in which the heroine has the final confrontation with the bad guy (WATCH ME, CATCH ME, LAST BREATH, SILENCE OF THE LAMBS, etc.). <p> However, Kava seems to have finally done some research in order to make Maggie O'Dell a more believable profiler. However, the author's Catholic sensibilities are reflected in O'Dell and what could have been a rousing love scene (virtually an obligatory ingredient in a Mira book) degenerates into a sloppy handjob because O'Dell is still technically married to her estranged husband Greg. <p> As in the end of APE, Kava sets the stage for the next sequel by occasionally mentioning the Rev. Everett and alluding to Father Keller. I can't help but feel, however, that if Kava were allowed the time, she could create a real winner out of the first meeting between Maggie O'Dell and Albert Stucky that culminated in that Miami warehouse. With the proper treatment, she could make a viable sequel out of that backstory. <p> I'll wait until O'Dell's next adventure comes out in paperback next August or buy a used hard cover on eBay. If Mira cannot give Kava the time to write a better book, then I cannot spend over $23 buying those books.
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 30, 2006
Of all of Alex Kava's books Split Second is a little hard to get into at first, because all that she talks about is how Maggie O'Dell is separated from her husband. But then strange things start happening. Everyone in BSU office is tiptoeing around her because of a previous case about a serial killer named Albert Stucky. O'Dell still has nightmares about the event and is forced to see a psychologist. The fireball that O'Dell is she can¿t stop herself from blowing up at her shrink. After leaving she finds out that she has new partner, which she isn¿t happy about. O¿Dell is a lone wolf, and overworks. When the story finally shifts to a new case odd similarities start to show up from a previous case. In fact this new case and the Albert Stucky case are oddly alike. O'Dell and her new partner have to hurry in order to catch the killer before he kills anymore people. Later on someone close to O'Dell is captured and they have to race the clock to save her. This was a wonderful book, but a little slower paced than her last book, but just as intriguing. I highly recommend it.
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Posted October 30, 2003
After reading A Perfect Evil, which I thoroughly enjoyed, I couldn't wait to read Split Second. I must say that the book just seemed to drag on and didn't have the energy as A Perfect Evil.
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Posted June 1, 2003
Another excellent story by Alex Kave. She holds my attention and shares the kind of suspence I enjoy. The stories are in a variety of locations across the US that bring realalty and intrest to the reader. She had researched both the victims and muders roles to perfection. I hope to see Alex Kava become another Patrica Cornwell!
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Posted December 28, 2002
I read this book first and couldn't put it down. Very fast paced and a real page turner. I felt I had discovered a new mystery-thriller writer that needs to be applauded for her skill. Can't wait to see what she comes up with next. I hope she writes a sequel to "A Perfect Evil" - the story is still lingering....
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Posted August 5, 2001
Good reading. Strong characters and fast action make it one you want to read.
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Posted September 2, 2001
I simply love this author her books are super good. Keeping you guessing until the last. Can't wait for her next book. Please hurry:):):)):)
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.They nicknamed him the Collector because Albert Stuckey captured his victims and slowly tortured and raped them over a period of months in ways too horrible to imagine. Eventually he broke their will to live before killing them. Top FBI profiler Maggie O¿Dell spent two years profiling Alex before she could help bring him down and see him locked away. <P>During a transfer to a maximum-security prison, Stuckey frees himself and kills two armed escorts before vanishing. When the FBI learns about the Collector¿s escape, they remove Maggie from the field and reassign her to a teaching position. However when acquaintances of Maggie are murdered with an M.O. identical to that of Alex, she is placed in charge of the case in the hopes that lightning strikes twice. If she fails she knows she will be better off dead. <P> SPLIT SECOND centers on the obsessive behavior of the heroine and the villain especially towards one another because both are not just determined, they need to bring their opponent down. Thus readers have a front row seat to the ultimate cat and mouse game in which the person playing the feline seems to change with every twist of the plot. Alex Kava fills her psychological thriller with plenty of action as well, but it is her characters whose motivations are quite understandable and moves the audience. SPLIT SECOND is one book that would be a crime for sub-genre fans to miss. <P>Harriet Klausner
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Posted June 30, 2001
Many say that FBI agent Maggie O¿Dell has lost it, but none of them know the mental torture she had endured while trying to capture killer Albert Stucky. Since the capture of Stucky, Maggie has had to live with her fellow co-workers belittling her, as well as the images of the victims she could not save. But, as Maggie is getting a grip on her life, she learns the news that Stucky has escaped. As the body count rises, and the trail seems to be leading directly to Maggie, The Bureau puts her back on the case, only this time the hunt will push her to the limits, as Stucky has his own twisted game he wants to play. Under the supervision of Special Agent R.J. Tully, Maggie will follow the trail of victims, only to discover she is on the verge of crossing the line¿one that separates her from the madman she is hunting down. And, she is left wondering one thing, has her need to stop Stucky turned her into a monster? `Split Second¿ is an awesome follow- up to the thriller `A Perfect Evil¿. The pages turn as fast as the bodies fall, and even though Alex Kava keeps the suspense pumped, she manages to detail the troubles of her heroine, giving readers an understanding of what is going through Maggie¿s mind. With this, her second novel, Alex Kava has become an author to reckon with in the thriller genre. As many people are trying to write good serial killer novels, Ms. Kava is doing it. And, as with the novel before it, `Split Second¿ is a page-turning tale of cat and mouse that will further catapult the author to the forefront of thriller writers. Nick Gonnella
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Posted October 17, 2011
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Posted August 13, 2011
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Posted April 5, 2011
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Posted December 29, 2010
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Posted December 25, 2010
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