Fool Me Once. By Harlan
Coben. Dutton. $28.
The Stranger. By Harlan
Coben. Dutton. $9.99.
There is a certain twisty
reliability to Harlan Coben’s mysteries, and it permeates both his newest, Fool Me Once, and last year’s The Stranger, now available in
paperback. A master of plot twists and turns, Coben consistently places
ordinary people in extraordinary but barely plausible circumstances and watches
their belief systems unravel as they try to cope with a reality that, it turns
out, is very different from the one in which they have previously lived their
entire adult lives. Investigations of bizarre or at least significantly
misunderstood circumstances eventually lead to surprising findings that, in the
end, tie matters up very neatly (sometimes too neatly) and leave the survivors
– and readers – drained and breathless.
The central victim of this
treatment – that is, the protagonist – in Fool
Me Once is Maya Burkett. A former Army special-ops helicopter pilot in
Iraq, she has returned home in disgrace after a whistleblower revealed that she
targeted a car full of civilians while on a rescue mission. Now,
understandably, she has nightmares and is coping with post-traumatic stress
disorder. But the stresses are scarcely less at home than they were during her
deployment. Her sister, Claire, has been murdered in a home invasion four
months before the book starts; and soon after Maya returns to her two-year-old
daughter, Lily, and her husband, Joe, there is another killing – of Joe. It
happens in a park, right in front of Maya, and in fact Coben starts the book
with Maya at Joe’s funeral (filling in the background later). The pileup of
terrible things is overdone but not unusual for a thriller, and it certainly
establishes that Maya is unstable in some ways and is capable of making
horrible judgment errors. That is crucial to the plot, because what really sets
things in motion is that Maya reviews the video on a “nanny cam” that a friend
gives her so she can keep up with her daughter’s activities during the work day
– and there in the video is her dead husband playing with their child. Is she
seeing things? Is he really dead? If not, what is going on? And away we go.
Maya, like other Coben protagonists, goes into full-on investigative mode after
seeing the impossible living-room scene. The pacing in the first part of the
book is slower than in some others by Coben: Maya spends a lot of time thinking
things through and trying to figure them out rather than actually doing much.
But that does make it easier to empathize with her and have a feeling of
knowing some of what makes her tick – although Coben is too clever to provide
strong clues as to what is reality and what may be in Maya’s PTSD-affected
mind. Typically for a Coben thriller, Fool
Me Once requires its protagonist not only to look into what sort of person
someone else (in this case Maya’s husband) really is, but also to look into
what sort of person she herself really is. It is obvious from the start that Maya
will need this journey into her own personal hell (or set of hells) to come to
terms with what happened in Iraq and what happened (if it did happen) to Joe.
And, for that matter, to Claire. Maya’s past is packed with deceit and secrets
– the past is usually like that for Coben’s central characters – and just as
Maya is not all she at first seems to be, so those around her are not all they seem to be. Maya’s investigation
goes through a variety of convolutions, most of them tossed at readers in
Coben’s trademark “gotcha” style, and if the book is rather slow to gather a
full head of steam, it is highly effective once it has one. Few readers will
see where all this is going – Coben is good at sending people down blind alleys
– and virtually none will likely figure out where it is going to end up. The
ending is exceptionally effective, just about impossible to see coming, and
exactly the sort of “wow” moment that keeps readers coming back to thrillers in
general and Coben’s books in particular. The book’s title comes, of course,
from the cliché, “Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.” But
there is no shame at being fooled again and again by Coben – it is what he
does, and in general he does it mighty well.
He does it pretty well in The Stranger, too; the book even
contains the line, “Put simply, people fool you.” Here the protagonist is a
lawyer named Adam Price, living comfortably in the suburbs with his wife,
Corinne, and their two sons. Then one day, at a school sporting event, he is
approached by the title character and told something about his wife that
Corinne has been keeping a secret for years and that, predictably (if you know
Coben’s plotting), shatters the family’s carefully arranged and well-balanced life.
Adam confronts Corinne with the secret, and she tells him there is more to it
than that and she needs time alone. Then she packs her bags and goes off to
who-knows-where; Adam certainly does not know. Meanwhile – this is a
“meanwhile” sort of thriller – a small-town police chief, Johanna Griffin, is
looking into the death of one of her close friends. And somehow the stranger
has something to do with what happened. So there is some way in which Adam and
Johanna are connected, and the murder may be directly connected with Corinne,
and so forth. The characters here are weaker than in Fool Me Once – Adam, in particular, is awfully dense for a successful
lawyer, difficult to empathize with, and consistent in failing to use available
resources and instead doing pretty much everything the wrong way. This goes
beyond befuddlement into authorial over-manipulation. The real-world
connections of the book, however, are strong: it deals with detective work (both
good and nefarious) that involves computers and smartphones, and includes a
ripped-from-the-headlines element involving a white police officer’s shooting
of a black man. But The Stranger
tries a little too hard to be convincing. The title character turns out to be
involved in a sort of whistleblower group (“revealing what people do not want
revealed” is a recurrent Coben theme); the organization’s functioning is not
very believable. The deep, dark secret that Corinne has – it has to do with
faking a pregnancy – is never satisfactorily explained in a way that would show
why it was so devastating and had to be buried so thoroughly. On the other
hand, the arrangement of the novel as a sort of cat-and-cat-and-mouse-and-mouse
game – lots of people looking for lots of other people – makes it a fast and
often enjoyable read. The complications are eventually resolved in an ending
that is a little too perfect. Longtime thriller readers may almost find it
funny, although if they do, it will be about the only amusing thing here:
neither this book nor Fool Me Once
offers much in the way of leavening humor (although some other Coben books do).
The underlying notion of The Stranger
is that there are people out there tracking everyone’s every move, digging out
bad things from people’s pasts, selling the information to the highest bidder,
then using the money they make to perpetuate their search-and-destroy attack on
people’s lives. Well, it could be. Certainly there are plenty of
technology-adept bad actors out there, and certainly most people, including
thriller readers, have a few things in their past that they would prefer not to
have revealed to the world at large, or to their families and intimate friends.
It is primarily the veneer of plausibility of the foundation of The Stranger that makes the book
chilling, even though the specifics of the story and characters are not Coben’s
best. Both this book and Fool Me Once
are standalone novels; Coben is also known for his Myron Bolitar and Mickey
Bolitar series. His preoccupation with the unresolved past means that the
standalone books are satisfyingly packed with turmoil and trouble that Coben
resolves skillfully at the end. Neither The
Stranger nor Fool Me Once is at quite
the highest level that Coben has achieved, but both are page-turners of the
type that thriller readers want and expect, and neither will disappoint anyone
looking for hard-to-figure-out stories in which the things that were come back
to haunt the things that are. Coben’s books are the contemporary,
super-fast-paced versions of ones that, in the past, built more slowly in
showing the truth of Faulkner’s famous statement in Requiem for a Nun: “The
past is never dead. It's not even past.” And Coben’s protagonists are
encapsulations of a much-less-known Faulkner quotation, which appeared in a
1942 magazine article: “Be scared. You can’t help that. But don’t be afraid.”
That advice applies just as much to Coben’s fans as to his characters.
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