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The Chase by Candice Fox: book review

 


The Chase by Candice Fox (2021) is a crime thriller set in the Nevada Desert in America. 

 

A man takes a bus load of people hostage: 12 women, 8 men, and 14 children. They are the family members of prison guards at the Pronghorn Correctional Facility in Nevada. The man demands the release of more than 600 inmates in the prison, including everyone on Death Row. His demands are met and 600 prisoners are freed – into the desert. 

 

One of the released prisoners – the escapees – is John Kradle, convicted of murdering his wife and son. He hasn’t seen a sunset in ten years: and now he is looking at the tomato-red sun. He pulls himself together when he realizes that this is his chance to prove his innocence. But to do that, he must avoid capture because every law enforcer in the area is hell-bent on re-capturing the escapees. 

 

In the vein of the 1963-67 television series and 1993 movie The Fugitive, the chase is on – multiplied by 600. 

 

Heading the fugitive chase is Death Row Supervisor Celine Osbourne. The person she wants to hunt down most of all is John Kradle. She wants him back on Death Row where convicted murderers have the death sentence. She knows him well, and she knows where he is running to. And she has personal reasons for wanting him back behind bars. 

 

This is another page-turner by best-selling author Candice Fox. 









 

 

MARTINA NICOLLS

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MARTINA NICOLLS  is an international human rights-based consultant in education, healing and wellbeing, peace and stabilization, foreign aid audits and evaluations, and the author  of: The Paris Residences of James Joyce  (2020), Similar But Different in the Animal Kingdom (2017), The Shortness of Life: A Mongolian Lament (2015), Liberia’s Deadest Ends (2012), Bardot’s Comet (2011), Kashmir on a Knife-Edge (2010) and The Sudan Curse (2009). She lives in Paris.

 

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