cover image An Eye for an Eye

An Eye for an Eye

Jeffrey Archer. HarperCollins, $30 (384p) ISBN 978-0-00-864018-7

Archer’s underwhelming seventh crime thriller featuring Scotland Yard detective William Warwick (after Traitors Gate) shakily braids together a case of national importance with one closer to Warwick’s home life. Near the turn of the 21st century, Prime Minister Tony Blair dispatches banker Simon Hartley—the son of an esteemed Lord—to Saudi Arabia to negotiate a deal exchanging British arms for Saudi oil. Soon after Hartley arrives in Riyadh, he attends a reception alongside Prince Ahmed bin Majid and his favorite female companion, Avril Dubois. During the gathering, the prince stabs an Italian guest to death after he puts his hand on Avril’s thigh. Though plenty of people saw what actually happened, Hartley is arrested for the crime and confined in a Saudi prison. Meanwhile, Warwick’s family is targeted by his nemesis, Miles Faulkner, who seeks, from behind bars, to both sabotage Warwick’s wife’s career as an art museum director and steal an original version of the Declaration of Independence. While Warwick and other British officials work to free Hartley, Warwick starts to realize that the distance between Hartley’s case and his own struggles with Faulkner may be shorter than he thought. Archer tanks his intriguing setup with disappointing twists and too many contrivances. It’s a misfire. (Sept.)