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Keith Raffel

Author of A Fine and Dangerous Season

5 Works 181 Members 8 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Includes the name: Keith Raffel

Image credit: Photo by Mark Coggins

Works by Keith Raffel

A Fine and Dangerous Season (2013) 49 copies, 2 reviews
Smasher (The Silicon Valley Mysteries) (2009) 38 copies, 1 review
Drop By Drop: A Thriller (2011) 37 copies, 1 review
Temple Mount: A Novel (2014) 14 copies, 1 review

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Gender
male

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Reviews

8 reviews
I was expecting some high-tech shenanigans and corporate power plays. The little bits of that in the story only provided background. This was a simple, suburban murder mystery. It could have taken place anywhere, not just Silicon Valley.

The good: There was a mystery to solve, and it unfolded through the course of the book without telegraphing too much too soon. The prose was decent with occasional highlights.

The bad: The pace was leisurely. The cast of characters were all too laid back, show more including the hero and the villain. There needed to be more conflict and more suspense. I found myself skimming and skipping without missing much of the plot at all. The wrap-up did rely on a few coincidences.

Two stars means I found it to be average, but not bad.
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Well done thriller about shenanigans in DC. It had everything it needed to make it good.. suspense, betrayal, death of innocents.. and a really bad bad guy. All pulled together wine enough twists to make it intriguing. Don't miss it. I will be looking for more by this author .
½
I enjoyed this fictionalized account of the Cuban Missile Crisis, told from the point of view of Nate Michaels, a Hewlett Packard engineer called to Washington DC to help the president with the delicate negotiations between the US and the Soviets.

Nate and the President Kennedy are old friends--or at least they knew each other before the start of World War II and long before JFK became president. At this point, Nate wants nothing to do with the man for reasons that become evident as the show more novel progresses.

Nate is the son of a labor leader with strong ties to the Communist party which brought him into contact years ago with Anatoly Voklov, a Soviet operative. Or envoy. (Or Russian guy hanging around, I never was sure of what his title was) Voklov requests to speak to Nate, thus beginning Nate's odyssey as an secret negotiator between the US and the Soviets at a time when the world was inches away from nuclear war.

Nate is responsible for saving the world.

Raffel gets the details right, including the names of the network news correspondents of the time--Huntley and Brinkley, Sander Vanocer, Nancy Dickerson.

He also manages to weave real historical characters like John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, General Curtis LeMay and Robert McNamara into a fictional story, not an easy feat.
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Womanizer JFK has called upon his estranged college friend to come to Washington, D. C. to help diffuse a crisis in Cuba? The Russians are placing nuclear weapons on the Cuban shores. Interesting twist on the historical events at the time. Despite knowing the results, there's still a lot of nail-biting!
½

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Statistics

Works
5
Members
181
Popularity
#119,335
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
8
ISBNs
8
Favorited
1

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