The Quiet Game
The Quiet Game book cover

The Quiet Game

Hardcover – September 1, 1999

Price
$27.90
Format
Hardcover
Pages
433
Publisher
Dutton Adult
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0525937937
Dimensions
7.25 x 1.5 x 9.75 inches
Weight
1.65 pounds

Description

Is there space in the overcrowded courtroom for one more writer of sharp, very suspenseful legal thrillers? Yes--if that writer is Greg Iles, who has proven in such varied efforts as Black Cross , Mortal Fear , and Spandau Phoenix that he knows how to squeeze the last drop of suspense out of all sorts of situations. Iles immediately makes us feel both sympathy and empathy for his glossy hero, Penn Cage--a former ace Texas prosecutor turned suspense novelist whose sales are up there in the John Grisham Himalayan range. Trying to cope with the recent death of his wife, Cage takes his 5-year-old daughter to Florida's Disney World, where the child sadly sees visions of her mother everywhere in the fantasy-filled environment. Wouldn't a trip to his parents' stately home in Natchez be more soothing for all concerned? Wrong, as it turns out--and before Cage can catch his breath, he's deeply involved in several dangerous matters. His father, a dedicated doctor, is being blackmailed for a past mistake in judgment, and a powerful judge (who just happens to be the father of Penn's high school sweetheart) has a nasty personal agenda of his own. Then there's the unsolved 1968 murder case of a black man, which Cage insists on reopening with the help of an attractive, ambitious newspaper publisher. Iles does for Natchez what John Berendt did for Savannah in Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil , creating a gothic Southern landscape where elegance and depravity walk hand in hand. --Dick Adler From Publishers Weekly Although it takes place in Natchez, Miss., and is flavored with the violence and seamy undertones of a Southern Gothic, this fourth thriller by Iles (Spandau Phoenix) owes just as much to a familiar parallel universe where wealthy male lawyers double as tragic heroes, women are invariably smart and attractive, and trials are by definition "high profile." After his wife's death, Penn Cage, a former Houston prosecutor and a bestselling suspense novelist, retreats to his parents' home in Natchez with his grieving young daughter. The healing process is interrupted when Cage learns that someone is blackmailing his father, a saintly family doctor who once made a lethal mistake. In tracing the source of his father's moral dilemma, Cage stumbles upon a trail of lies surrounding the unsolved murder of a black man in 1968. He determines to reopen the case, even though his antebellum hometown is smoldering with racial tension. With the assistance of Caitlin Masters, the attractive, smart and ambitious publisher of the local newspaper, Cage gradually uncovers an intricate conspiracy that reaches up to the highest levels of the FBI. Forced to confront powerful Judge Leo Marston, who nearly destroyed his father in pursuing an unrelated, unfounded malpractice accusation decades before, Cage must also face Marston's daughter, Livy, his old high school sweetheart, who tries to persuade Cage to let sleeping dogs lie. It is difficult at times to sympathize with Cage, who proselytizes about truth, justice and obligation, yet destroys evidence to protect his father and fails to properly shield his loved ones as he single-mindedly pursues the case. Still, this ably crafted, richly atmospheric legal thriller is engrossing, and readers will forgive Iles's protagonist a few shortcomings. Agent, Aaron Priest. Major ad/promo; 15-city author tour; British rights to Hodder Headline; audio rights to Recorded Books. (Sept.) Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Library Journal A decision to give up a lucrative law practice in Houston and return to his home town in Natchez, MS, plunges author/ attorney Penn Cage headlong into a 30-year-old unsolved murder with all the trappings of a civil rights case. Penn's motives smack of personal vendetta, since the man he suspects of planning the murder is a powerful former state's attorney and judge who tried to ruin the medical practice of Penn's father through an unsuccessful malpractice suit several years earlier. As Penn probes into the murder, he begins to discover an FBI cover-up, thrusting his family into a life-threatening situation. Iles (Mortal Fear) has penned a Southern superthriller that rivals John Grisham's best. Fast-paced action, surprise tactics, and down-and-dirty legal maneuvering played out below the surface calm of the deep South will transfix the reader to the very last page. Recommended for all public libraries. -AThomas L. Kilpatrick, Southern Illinois Univ. Lib., Carbondale Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Kirkus Reviews Preposterous, but eminently suspenseful, legal procedural about a Mississippi river town's buried secrets, by the author of Mortal Fear (1996), etc. Penn Cage, once a Texas prosecutor, now an infinitely wealthy bestselling lawyer-novelist, cant get over the recent cancer death of his wife, and is just a bit troubled about death threats from the brother of a demented white supremacist he put on death row. After a vacation in Disney World with his daughter Annie, Cage embarks on an extended visit with his parents in Natchez, Tennessee, where he finds that Ray Presley, a white-trash former cop is blackmailing Penn's saintly physician father. It seems that Presley filched a gun from the good doctor, then used it in an unsolved murder. Now, Penn buys back the gun from Presley with a mountain of cash, and later sits down for a famous author interview with the young, rich, beautiful, and brainy Caitlin Masters, the Pulitzer-crazed publisher of the local newspaper, during which he mentions, in passing, a 1968 racially motivated murder of Del Peyton, a young, black factory worker that both the police and the FBI failed to solve. Masters prints her interview, stirring up old animosities all over, including a rancorous legal dispute between Cage's father and Judge Leo Marston, a local powerbroker who was a district attorney at the time. Peyton's widow suddenly appears and asks the famous writer to find who killed her husband. Penn reluctantly agrees, then runs into his old girlfriend, Livy Marston, Leo's flawless, southern-belle daughter. Livy mysteriously ditched Cage 20 years ago, but now can't wait to stoke the old fire. Meanwhile, FBI Director John Portman, Cage's old nemesis, weighs in with nasty threats as Cage braves bullies, dodges bullets, rides down icy rapids, and prepares for a courtroom battle. Breezy, Grisham-style read that tweaks the conventions of southern gothic. (Author tour) -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. Greg Iles is a graduate of the University of Mississippi and performed in the musical group Frankly Scarlet for several years before writing his first novel, Spandau Phoenix. He lives in Natchez, Mississippi, with his wife and two children. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Penn Cage is no stranger to death. As a Houston prosecutor he sent sixteen men to death row, and watched seven of them die. But now, in the aftermath of his wife's death, the grief-stricken father packs up his four-year-old daughter, Annie, and returns to his hometown in search of healing. But peace is not what he finds there.Determined to save his father from a ruthless blackmailer, Penn stumbles over a link to the town's darkest secret: the thirty-year-old unsolved murder of a black Korean War veteran. But what drives him to act is the revelation that this haunting mystery is inextricably bound up with his own past. Under a blaze of national media attention, Penn reopens the case, only to find local records destroyed, the FBI file sealed, and the town closing ranks against him.Penn joins forces with Caitlin Masters, a beautiful young newspaper publisher, on a quest that will lead from the bayous of the South to the highest reaches of the U.S. government. His need to right a terrible wrong pits him against the FBI, the powerful judge who nearly destroyed his family, and his most dangerous adversary: a woman he loved more than twenty years before, and who haunts him still.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(8.8K)
★★★★
25%
(3.7K)
★★★
15%
(2.2K)
★★
7%
(1K)
-7%
(-1030)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Smoldering and Refreshing

Greg Iles has possibly the greatest range of any current suspense novelist: WWII, Internet Sex, Secrets of the Deep South... Iles weaves into his books the historical texture of Caleb Carr, double the plot twists of Grisham, and thrice the build-up of Crichton. Speaking of those two, they should be reminded there are writers like Iles who put in the effort to allow a book to stand on its own merits without the carrot of a movie deal.
Despite Iles' harsh characterization of my native Boston (perhaps he is as misinformed of New England as he believes I am of his home) I became entranced by his use of setting as character and his portrayal of imperfect heroes and revered heels. He uses enough misleading foreshadowing to annoy me into staying up late to try to come to a conclusion.
I believe Black Cross was his best work, this his second, Mortal Fear third and Spandau Phoenix fourth. Funny that most people have read only Spandau Phoenix. I do have one complaint - please hurry up on your next book. Stephen King may be from dreaded New England, but for God's sake, at least he puts out a book every now and then! Maybe then more would learn there are great alternatives to the latest drivel from the big boys.
124 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

John Grisham wants to be like Greg Iles when he grows up!

Not that I have any problem with John Grisham, but he seems to be compared quite often to Iles and I honestly don't see it. Grisham, although sometimes entertaining, tends to write screenplays rather than novels. The Quiet Game, although as familiar as Grisham in landscape, takes you on an absolute roller coaster of intrigue with a diverse cast of players leaving you with an uncontrollable passion to continue turning pages.
Parts of this tale are certainly predictable, who the bad guys are is no secret, and the majority of the plot is far fetched,... but isn't that what fiction is supposed to be all about? Particularly fiction in the thriller genre?
Iles has a gift for making even the predictable components of the story exciting to read as well as taking ordinary dialog and making it compelling. His use of the first person narrative, which I am not often a fan of, was an excellent choice for unfolding the story in a Whodunnit fashion that grips you and steadily immerses you into Natchez Mississippi and the heart of this story.
This is Iles' 4th book, and very different from the rest, and I loved them all. He's just replaced Crichton as my personal favorite author. I recommend him to anybody.
59 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

The Quiet Game

If you are an avid reader every once in a while you stumble onto a book that is impossible to put down. I am delighted that I found Mr. Iles and this terrific book. An absolutely wonderful read.
40 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Hooked on Greg Iles; his writing style is riveting!

Greg Iles' use of the first person singular point of view in his novel, "The Quiet Game", is a powerful tool to make the reader align himself with Penn Cage, an attorney and author who debuts as the hero of Iles novel of the south. Raised in Natchez, Mississippi and haunted by the death of his wife, Cage returns with his small daughter. Life is not as simple as remembered, and Cage is drawn reluctantly (and by his ego!) into a complicated mystery that has remained unsolved for many years.
Too quickly, his family and friends are endangered by his probes into the coverup of what appears to be a civil rights murder of his childhood. Cage keeps digging, formulating his own conclusions (sometimes wrong!) as he goes, and eventually bringing the misdeeds of the past to light.
Iles' prose will leave you breathless and will cause you to delay your chores while you get to the end of "one more chapter"...and then another and another.
4 stars instead of 5 when I so obviously enjoyed it? Iles makes
the plot unnecessarily complex with one too many twists and turns. For instance, the story could have survived and remained powerful without Olivia....but, small flaws notwithstanding, Iles novel will keep me going back for more of his writing. Enjoy!
14 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A great new find

This was my first Greg Iles book, and I have gone back to order more and will look for his books to come. The characters were well developed, and the plot fascinating. In going back 30 years to solve a murder, relationships that have changed the course of lives, and the events in the town of Natchez come to light. The Quiet Game is more compelling and literate than Grisham's books. I enjoyed the insight into Mississippi culture and the racial boundaries that existed in the late 60's as well as the ongoing revelations about J. Edgar Hoover.
9 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Don't miss this book for pure enjoyment!

Okay, okay, I agree that the topic is a little overused, but Greg did such a good job developing the characters I didn't mind the civil rights stuff. Mortal Fear was awesome. Anyone that has not read it should read it too. The Quiet Game was just as good, in a different way. Greg is a very versatile author and I can't wait to see what he comes up with next! Greg if you read this, write one about Vicksburg!
7 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Iles Goes to New Level

This book by Greg Iles is his best yet. It far surpasses his previous work in the area of pure writing. While Black Cross was very good and certainly entertaining; Spandau Phoenix was good and Mortal Fear...awful! ...this writing approaches great literature. The imagery, feelings and insight begin to approach Cold Mountain standards...but are not there yet. This is book that I looked forward to reading not just becasue of the story and plotting, but becasue of the rich banquet of methaphors and insights that arre obviously Greg's own in many respects. Experts tell young writers to write about what you know Here Greg has taken their advice. I feel so good about this book that I intend to send my copy addressed to Mr. Iles, Author, Natchez, MS and trust that he'll get it and sign it for me. Buy this book!
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Better than Grisham

As much as I enjoy John Grisham's work, I much prefer Iles. His characters are deeper, plots richer and the pace faster. With only 4 books to his name (all superb) I hope Mr Iles catches up to his fellow Mississipian in popularity. He richly deserves it! This book is somewhat reminiscent of Grisham's first book (and still his best) "A Time to Kill". There is a racially motivated killing, racial tension and underneath it all the discomfort we all feel when justice does not prevail. Keep it coming, Mr Iles!
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

The Quiet Game Speaks Loudly

Iles once again writes an entertaining compelling story. Though somewhat less intense and riveting than his other works, The Quiet Game is the best exploration of southern racism since Grisham's best work in A Time to Kill. A real nice change of pace for Iles. Done with conviction and agreat deal of personality. It was easy to connect with all the characters
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Simply an enjoyable read....twisting and entertaining.

This was my first Greg Iles book and I'd like to compliment him on an enjoyable read. It is the perfect "beach" book. In some instances, Iles went a little overboard on his plot twists...for example...Ike the Spike's revelation wasn't necessary and he wouldn't have been the slightest bit cooperative at any time during the book. Also, in the last three days Penn Cage never slept and must have had super human strength bordering on unbelievable. However, on the whole, Iles kept my attention and my pages turning. I look forward to more of Greg Iles' work.
4 people found this helpful