Tamara Bass
The Last Mile begins with Melvin Mars who is currently on Death Row for supposedly killing his parents. He has always claimed innocence, but evidence against him proved otherwise. Twenty years later on the day of his execution, he gets a reprieve as someone else comes forth and confesses that he was in fact the one who killed Mars’ parents. Something just does not seem right though. Decker wants this case bad because of the similarities between this case and the case of his that has never been solved. With the help of the FBI, Mars himself, and a special task force, this well-crafted novel provides the reader with an abundance of twists and turns that keeps you on the edge of your seat the entire time. Amos Decker is perhaps the coolest fictional detective ever. Due to an accident which ended his NFL career, he has a medical condition that enables him to have perfect recall of everything – which comes in pretty handy in his line of work, but is also a curse because he remembers EVERYTHING and let’s face it, sometimes you just want to forget. In addition to his memory thing, he is funny, unique and totally relatable. Although The Last Mile is book two in the series, I feel as though it can be read as a stand-alone. But with that being said, I am definitely going to go back and read Memory Man just for the fact that I love Decker and want to learn more about him. David Baldacci definitely has an awesome talent of drawing the reader in and keeping them guessing until the very end. The Last Mile has everything I love in a good mystery – highly captivating, fast-paced, well-written, suspenseful, and a cast of well-developed characters that will keep you wanting to know how the story will end. An intriguing read that you will not want to put down.
11 people found this review helpful
Jo-Anne B.
Amos Decker was on his way to Washington where he was to join an FBI special task force investigating cold cases. He heard the news on the radio that a former college football star, Melvin Mars, was hours away from being executed for the murder of his parents 20 years ago, when someone else (also on death row) claimed responsibility for the murder. Decker is suspicious about this sudden development and recommends the task force take on this case because he wants to know the truth. This was quite a thrilling page-turner. I loved the surprising twists this story took. The characters were interesting, especially Mars. I routed for and felt sorry for him throughout the book. Decker was interesting once I understood him more. I was confused about him at the beginning of the book. I gather the first book explained more about Decker so if I had read it I would have understood more about him. Most books have short refreshers about the characters to remind readers who they are. That didn't happen in this book so I wanted to know what profession he was in that enabled him to start working for the FBI among other things. The story was enjoyable once I got some of my questions answered. I suggest reading the first book before this one. I won this book in a Goodreads Firstreads giveaway. I didn't get it for a long time so Goodreads' customer support helped me get a copy. I really appreciate their work on this.
12 people found this review helpful