On This Page
Description
"At every death scene, Bennett says a prayer over the victim. But recently, too many of departed have been fellow cops. 'I want you to look at these deaths on special assignment,' NYPD Inspector Celeste Cantor says. 'Report only to me.' Bennett excels as a solo investigator. But he's chasing a killer who feeds on isolation--and paranoia"--Tags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
Paranoia is the seventeenth book in the Michael Bennett series by James Patterson and James O. Born and was published in 2025. The continuing saga of New York’s best homicide detective, his ever-growing Irish Catholic family, his team and the a few murders scattered throughout the book.
Bennett is attending the funeral of another ex-cop who seems to have gone far too soon, but he has been given the full honours due. He takes his young detective protégé, Rob Trilling, with him so that he may make a few more NYPD contacts. It was here that NYPD inspector Celeste Cantor asks him to solve a little problem that she needs to keep quiet. Some one is going around possibly murdering members of her old team and making it look like suicide.
At show more home, his wife, Mary Catherine is in the final stages of pregnancy and not feeling too good when Bennett rushes her to hospital. Where she has been assigned to total bed rest for at least two weeks. Good job that his family of ten are around to help and the eldest are there to marshal the youngest into school. Ricky is ready to audition for a teenage TV cooking show, so he is doing all the cooking, one job less for Bennett to worry about.
As with many of Patterson’s thrillers you can predict how the story ends and who the bad guys are and what they want. It is still readable even if it is predictable. It is like a thriller comfort blanket, nothing scary, nothing to make you get scared the bad guys are going to put one over the good guys. As with all American thrillers there is the usual happy ending, well as happy as anyone can be in New York. show less
Bennett is attending the funeral of another ex-cop who seems to have gone far too soon, but he has been given the full honours due. He takes his young detective protégé, Rob Trilling, with him so that he may make a few more NYPD contacts. It was here that NYPD inspector Celeste Cantor asks him to solve a little problem that she needs to keep quiet. Some one is going around possibly murdering members of her old team and making it look like suicide.
At show more home, his wife, Mary Catherine is in the final stages of pregnancy and not feeling too good when Bennett rushes her to hospital. Where she has been assigned to total bed rest for at least two weeks. Good job that his family of ten are around to help and the eldest are there to marshal the youngest into school. Ricky is ready to audition for a teenage TV cooking show, so he is doing all the cooking, one job less for Bennett to worry about.
As with many of Patterson’s thrillers you can predict how the story ends and who the bad guys are and what they want. It is still readable even if it is predictable. It is like a thriller comfort blanket, nothing scary, nothing to make you get scared the bad guys are going to put one over the good guys. As with all American thrillers there is the usual happy ending, well as happy as anyone can be in New York. show less
Paranoia: A Michael Bennett Thriller, James Patterson, James O. Born, authors, Peter Giles, Will Collyer, Kiff VandenHeuvel, narrators
All of a sudden, there seems to be an epidemic of retired cop suicides. At the same time, there seems to also be a surge in the murders of drug dealers. Are the two issues connected? Is there a serial killer or a hired professional assassin on the loose? Coincidentally, all of these deaths seem to be connected to cases that were investigated by a group nicknamed “the sharks”, and they all also involved a major drug dealer.
Celeste Cantor is retiring from the police force and is running for the City Council. Because she is worried that these killings might somehow be connected to her past police show more activity and hurt her chances to win the election, she asks her friend and fellow police officer, Michael Bennett, to partner with Rob Trilling, and look into these killings. She tells him to keep it below the radar and only report to her. She doesn’t want any undue negative publicity to touch her campaign.
The more interesting police investigation narratives were too often interrupted by the personal family matters of the Bennett family and others. The Bennetts are a model, well-adjusted family, but their romantic interests, health and other issues, along with the details of the personal and romantic lives of several other characters, added extraneous issues that never seemed resolved or necessary and were often distracting.
At the end, there seemed to be threads that were never tied up. Many of the murders were never solved. Why would Celeste ask Bennett to investigate crimes that she might be involved with, an investigation which would possibly cause problems for her? Why would an assassin have a sudden pang of conscience without a real compelling reason after being so cold-hearted? How was the drug dealer case really connected to this mystery? Why did it seem that so many good people had to be sacrificed so that the criminals could survive? I found the novel disappointing with what seemed like contrived finger pointing at corrupt cops and dishonest TV personalities that preyed on children or beautiful women.
There were “woke” ideas introduced like racial relationships and toxic males who were nothing more than thugs. There were unexplained connections of some characters to military service and Israel’s Mossad with negative insinuations. I did not think that these ideas were ever well explained or explored.
If you can get through the trivial scenes and some of the confusion, you will discover the story itself occasionally gets exciting in the way you would expect it to develop, but less extraneous dialogue and more thrilling scenes would have been appreciated. show less
All of a sudden, there seems to be an epidemic of retired cop suicides. At the same time, there seems to also be a surge in the murders of drug dealers. Are the two issues connected? Is there a serial killer or a hired professional assassin on the loose? Coincidentally, all of these deaths seem to be connected to cases that were investigated by a group nicknamed “the sharks”, and they all also involved a major drug dealer.
Celeste Cantor is retiring from the police force and is running for the City Council. Because she is worried that these killings might somehow be connected to her past police show more activity and hurt her chances to win the election, she asks her friend and fellow police officer, Michael Bennett, to partner with Rob Trilling, and look into these killings. She tells him to keep it below the radar and only report to her. She doesn’t want any undue negative publicity to touch her campaign.
The more interesting police investigation narratives were too often interrupted by the personal family matters of the Bennett family and others. The Bennetts are a model, well-adjusted family, but their romantic interests, health and other issues, along with the details of the personal and romantic lives of several other characters, added extraneous issues that never seemed resolved or necessary and were often distracting.
At the end, there seemed to be threads that were never tied up. Many of the murders were never solved. Why would Celeste ask Bennett to investigate crimes that she might be involved with, an investigation which would possibly cause problems for her? Why would an assassin have a sudden pang of conscience without a real compelling reason after being so cold-hearted? How was the drug dealer case really connected to this mystery? Why did it seem that so many good people had to be sacrificed so that the criminals could survive? I found the novel disappointing with what seemed like contrived finger pointing at corrupt cops and dishonest TV personalities that preyed on children or beautiful women.
There were “woke” ideas introduced like racial relationships and toxic males who were nothing more than thugs. There were unexplained connections of some characters to military service and Israel’s Mossad with negative insinuations. I did not think that these ideas were ever well explained or explored.
If you can get through the trivial scenes and some of the confusion, you will discover the story itself occasionally gets exciting in the way you would expect it to develop, but less extraneous dialogue and more thrilling scenes would have been appreciated. show less
9.78032E 12
Audio version
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Lists
LoanStars | Adult List: February 2025
10 works; 1 member
Author Information

899+ Works 463,878 Members
James Patterson was born in Newburgh, New York, on March 22, 1947. He graduated from Manhattan College in 1969 and received a M. A. from Vanderbilt University in 1970. His first novel, The Thomas Berryman Number, was written while he was working in a mental institution and was rejected by 26 publishers before being published and winning the Edgar show more Award for Best First Mystery. He is best known as the creator of Alex Cross, the police psychologist hero of such novels as Along Came a Spider and Kiss the Girls. Cross has been portrayed on the silver screen by Morgan Freeman. He has had eleven on his books made into movies and ranks as number 3 on the Hollywood Reporter's '25 Most Powerful Authors' 2016 list. He also writes the Women's Murder Club series, the Michael Bennett series, the Maximum Ride series, Daniel X series, the Witch and Wizard series, BookShots series, Private series, NYPD Red series, and the Middle School series for children. He has won numerous awards including the BCA Mystery Guild's Thriller of the Year, the International Thriller of the Year award, and the Reader's Digest Reader's Choice Award. James Patterson introduced the Bookshots Series in 2016 which is advertised as All Thriller No Filler. The first book in the series, Cross Kill, made the New York Times Bestseller list in June 2016. The third and fourth books, The Trial, and Little Black Dress, made the New York Times Bestseller list in July 2016. The next books in the series include, $10,000,000 Marriage Proposal, French Kiss, Hidden: A Mitchum Story (co-authored with James O. Born). and The House Husband (co-authored Duane Swierczynski). Patterson's novel, co-authored with Maxine Paetro, Woman of God, became a New York Times bestseller in 2016. Patterson co-authored with John Connoly and Tim Malloy the true crime expose Filthy Rich about billionaire convicted sex offender Jeffrey Eppstein. In January 2017, he co-authored with Ashwin Sanghi the bestseller Private Delhi. And in August 2017, he co-authored with Richard Dilallo, The Store. The Black Book is a stand-alone thriller, co-authored by James Patterson and David Ellis. In April 2018, he co-authored Texas Ranger with Andrew Bourelle. In May 2018, he co-authored Private Princess with Rees Jones. In August 2018 he co-authored Fifty Fifty with Candice Fox. (Bowker Author Biography) James Patterson is the author of seven major national bestsellers in a row. These include "Along Came a Spider", "Kiss the Girls", "Jack & Jill", "Cat & Mouse", "When the Wind Blows", "Pop Goes the Weasel", &, in paperback, "The Midnight Club". A past winner of the prestigious Edgar Award, Patterson lives in Florida. (Publisher Provided) show less

22+ Works 5,596 Members
James O. Born is an American author, born in Florida. He is a graduate of Florida State University and earned his Master's degree in psychology from the University of Southern Mississippi. Before becoming an author, he was a US Drug Agent (DEA) and later a Special Agent with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. He worked undercover with the show more Special Operation's Team (SWAT). He has also worked as an advisor to writers and TV shows. Walking Money was his first novel, published in 2004. He is the author of Burn Zone, Field of Fire, Shock Wave and Escape Clause which won the gold medal in the inaugural Florida Book Awards, in 2007. Under the pseudonym, James O'Neal, his work includes The Human Disguise and The Double Human. He is the co-author with James Patterson of the bestsellers, Hidden: A Mitchum Story and Haunted. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Awards and Honors
Notable Lists
Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Paranoia
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 224
- Popularity
- 144,789
- Reviews
- 4
- Rating
- (3.78)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 15
- ASINs
- 2




























































