Bangkok Post

Cool anti-hero

- BRUCE DESILVA

Riley Wolfe gets his kicks executing spectacula­r robberies that no one else would even contemplat­e. His victims are always the super-rich, whom he despises as “smug, do-nothing, self-loving leeches”.

This anti-hero makes his debut in Just Watch Me, a supremely entertaini­ng new thriller by Jeff Lindsay that promises to be the first of a series.

The plot combines the intricacie­s of caper movies such as The Thomas Crown Affair and To Catch A Thief

with the creepy sensibilit­y of the hit TV show Dexter.

The latter is no surprise since the show was inspired by Lindsay’s eight novels featuring Dexter Morgan, a serial killer who preyed only upon other serial killers. Unlike Dexter, Wolfe takes no pleasure in murder, but he displays no qualms about dispassion­ately dispatchin­g anyone who gets in his way.

The opening of the story finds Wolfe taking no satisfacti­on from his spectacula­r heist of a 12-tonne sculpture, swiped in broad daylight at its dedication ceremony. For him, the spectacula­r has become ordinary, and it bores him. He craves a caper that is “beyond impossible, something ridiculous, unthinkabl­e”.

He finds it when the government in Tehran, hoping to thaw its relations with the US, lends the Iranian crown jewels to a New York City museum. There, the multi-billion-dollar treasure is guarded by the latest in high-tech security systems and by both US-trained mercenarie­s and a “trigger-happy” contingent of Iranian Revolution­ary Guards.

Meanwhile, Wolfe is being tracked by Frank Delgado, a clever FBI agent who has been after him for years, always a step or two behind. Now, the agent has decided that the only way to catch Wolfe is to uncover his weakness — one that must have its roots in Wolfe’s upbringing.

So Delgado criss-crosses the eastern half of the United States, digging into Wolfe’s long-buried family history. Readers who know how caper stories usually work will have little doubt who is going to win this catand-mouse game, but the agent’s fine detective work succeeds in unearthing the influences that turned Wolfe into the man he has become.

Just Watch Me, then, is both an exciting crime story and a revealing exploratio­n of the psychology of a master criminal. The writing is tight and vivid, the characters are convincing­ly portrayed and the action is nonstop.

 ??  ?? Just Watch Me
By Jeff Lindsay Dutton
Just Watch Me By Jeff Lindsay Dutton

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