3 best Lincoln Child books

Indissolubly linked in the narrative to Douglas preston in a frenzied literary career. And despite it lincoln kid he also finds time for his individual forays into novels with a greater thriller point over the usual mystery of this successful literary team.

The thing is, both Lincoln and Preston have published their independent novels. It will be, more than anything, not to end up murdering each other (of hatred, I say).

Being one of the most recognized tandem internationally, such as the lars kepler (unified in this pseudonym so as not to confuse the staff) or other previous and inexhaustible such as the Lapierre and Collins at the time.

The four-hand writing thing is something that escapes me for several reasons. In the first place by the sensation of imaginary sharing as if the created worlds could overlap and second by the modus operandi or, rather, the formula for the division of labor.

But the thing is, it works. In the case of Child and Preston with the greatest efficiency ever. Now it's time to review Lincoln's private bibliography and I'm sure you would be surprised by these books ...

Top 3 Recommended Lincoln Child Novels

Lethal harmony

Already alone, each author is uncovered in the most unsuspected way. This technological thriller is a great discovery of the Child most unleashed around the dystopian suspense of new technologies.

We have all heard about the typical networks to find a partner (something that goes back to the first personal uses of the Internet, even in prehistoric chats). The point is that finding a partner evolves more and more in search of that perfect match, the point is that the perfect never exists and the AI ​​that strives to decipher the perfect combination in the field of emotions, will always err.

The Thorpes build a new world in common thanks to the online matchmaking of a company like Eden capable of configuring ideal couples. Everything is to build a happy world around the most perfect love.But the Thorpes end up committing suicide, like many other couples in whose paradoxical encounter with Eden, he ended up destroying them in any way.

Christopher Lash is in charge of the case and it doesn't take long to investigate Eden very closely. The manager himself, Richard Silver, brings him up to date on the operation of the system, trying to unlink causes and effects, until Lash himself ends up getting too fully involved in the matter, perhaps pushed by Richard Silver in defense of his company. And once inside the system, no objective investigation can succeed. Although perhaps it is only the most subjective focus that can end up explaining everything, only that the risk is very high.

Lethal harmony

Storm

Also for free, Lincoln Child sometimes pulls series to present its protagonists. In this case an intriguing Jeremy Logan claimed for the strangest cases presented in at least the five installments so far.

It all started with this claustrophobic or perhaps rather agorophobic novel in the middle of the ocean. There are already several occasions in which I find an oil platform as the nerve center for the sinister as the plot of a plot. And the thing is that it works because we move through a fragile, risky space, on the border where any accident can be fatal. Away from the world, the platform workers begin to suffer symptoms of some strange disease. We can assume that the thing has its intricacies as soon as we discover that the oil platform is a cover for other much more suggestive and disturbing purposes ...

Beyond what a doctor like Crane, sometimes lost in ailments that escapes him, may dictate, only Jeremy Logan can find the origin of everything to make it compatible with Crane's studies on the consequences. The two will live a special, transcendent moment . And on the physical and psychological consequences in workers, the horizon of a great discovery looms with the shadows of human ambition, of the most evil derivatives.

Storm

Utopia

Lincoln's science fiction point is undeniable in his freelance writing plot. His passion for technology to present parallel worlds, planes or at least transformations of our world from the artificial is evident.

On the rocky gorges of Nevada rises Utopia, a theme park visited by 65.000 people a day whose attractions have inaugurated a new generation of these entertainment centers. But an uninterrupted series of breakdowns in some of its advanced robots threatens not only the proper functioning of the park, but the safety of its visitors. Andrew Warne, the computer genius who developed the robotics that controls the park, needs to travel to it to try to find out what is going on. But on the day of his arrival, Utopia seems to be immersed in something much more sinister than simple, albeit dangerous, breakdowns.

A group of terrorists has infiltrated the computer system and is in control, and if they are not given what they ask for, every man, woman or child who visits the park could become a target. Warne has to play a role he never thought he was prepared for: saving thousands of innocent people… including his daughter. With surprising breathtaking plot twists, Lincoln Child describes the technological wonders of Utopia with such precision that it is hard to believe that the park exists only in the pages of this book.

Utopia
5/5 - (16 votes)

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