*I received a free copy of Passenger 19 from Oceanview Publishing via Netgalley. This has in no way influenced my voluntary review, which is honest and unbiased *
Passenger 19 by Ward LarsenSeries: Jammer Davis #3
Published by Oceanview Publishing on 5 January 2016
Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Suspense
Pages: 368
Format: eARC
Source: Netgalley
Jammer Davis has spent most of his life investigating aircraft accidents. When a small regional jet disappears over the jungles of Colombia, it is a tragedy like dozens of others he has seen…but for one terrible detail—his young daughter, who was enroute to a semester abroad in South America, is listed on the passenger manifest.
A distraught Davis rushes to Bogotá and bulls his way into the inquiry. When the wreckage is located, it becomes clear the crash was unsurvivable. As the investigation gains momentum, the facts go astray. Two pilots had been shot before the crash, along with one passenger. The possibility of a hijacking looms large as the search begins to focus on two passengers who boarded the plane, yet their remains cannot be found.Davis uncovers an even more sinister plot behind the entire disaster—one that goes to the highest levels of the United States government. But how could it possibly involve his daughter?
Passenger 19 is a fast paced suspense novel in which an investigator for the NTSB has to fly to Columbia to conduct an investigation he has a very personal interest in.
I was immediately intrigued when I read the summary for Passenger 19, because a guy who is used to investigating airplane crashes has some pretty tough knowledge. However, when he knows that his only daughter – his only relative, really – was on board a plane that went missing over the jungle in Colombia, he has a whole other problem to deal with. His boss at the NTSB still wanted Jammer for the job, though, because he thought Jammer would have the best incentive ever to get to the bottom of what had happened with the small plane. As Jammer was flown to Colombia, things got strange very quickly, most of all because the private plane he was brought in wasn’t there for anyone but him – no embassy documents or diplomat people, only Jammer.
Little by little, it became clear that not all was what it seemed with this particular crash, and Jammer had a hard time trusting his instinct. Because for once, he wasn’t only an anonymous investigator, he had a vested interest, and he wanted to believe his daughter had somehow made it out alive. However, he had people working against him – even if he couldn’t figure out exactly who these people were, and the suspense kept me on the edge of my seat, eagerly clicking forward to read the next page on my kindle.
Both Jammer and the other characters in Passenger 19 were complex and well fleshed out, and while I needed a good dose of suspension of disbelief at the beginning of the story – I had trouble believing that Jammer would be sent to investigate a crash where his daughter might be one of the casualties – I quickly got so caught up in the mystery I didn’t really care about that anymore. And I really enjoyed Jammer’s courage, his inner musings, and the way his mind worked, not a single detail was forgotten, even if he didn’t necessarily notice what was wrong when he first saw something.
With intricate politics, secret service, and the Colombian police on the case as well, Jammer had his plate full. Even more so when the Colombian chief investigator was found shot in his car in front of the headquarters for the investigation. Some incredible twists and turns made the story unfold with a lot of excitement, and as the full picture came into focus, I was left breathless with the implications of the whole plot.
Written in third person point of view, past tense, most of the story follows Jammer, but other characters are important as well, some of his former allies, some secret service agents, and a couple of DEA people stationed in Bogotà all made the plot more complex, while I, along with Jammer, never knew whom to trust.
His gaze was intense, his mouth slightly parted, a man who knew what he had to say, but wasn’t sure how to say it. In all the years he had know Green, Davis imagined he’d witnessed every mood an reaction in the general’s catalogue. Never before had he seen indecision.
Now it was happening all over again. If he lost Jen, where would he turn? for so long it had been the two of them, and even with Jen in college they talked every day. One of them made the three-hour drive every other week. His daughter was precious, absolutely everything to him.
His last trip to Colombia had indeed been awkward. This one had the makings of a catastrophe.
Reading this book contributed to these challenges:
I like the sounds of the mystery and the plot of the story but I’m still not sure, I’ll take a look of the books by the author.
I really enjoyed it, Melliane, and it always makes me happy when I find a male author who writes male characters I can get behind 🙂 You should definitely try one of Larsen’s books!
I couldn’t imagine being in a situation like that. Sounds like a crazy ride though.
It was a pretty wild ride for sure, Christy, but one I really enjoyed.
Twitter: ejaygirl77
This sounds really, really good! Off to find it and thanks for a great review.
I hope you’ll enjoy it as well, Jonetta! It was very well done 🙂
Twitter: ailynk
that was quite an intense story
Yes, Ailyn, it definitely was.
Twitter: bmreviewsohmy
This sounds like it could be an interesting read.
I think you’d enjoy it, Stormi, the mystery is well executed.
I haven’t read anything like this story before. It sounds really interesting. I love a story filled with twists and turns. I am glad that you enjoyed this one. Great review!
Twists and turns make a story very interesting, Carole, and Davis was a good character to follow.
Twitter: kbaby81
Sounds suspenseful! Glad you enjoyed it!
It was very suspenseful, Lekeisha, and the mystery was well done, too.
Wow! Passenger 19 really sounds intense and full of suspense, Lexxie. I can’t imagine being an NTSB investigator but to have to investigate a crash of the plane your daughter was on? You had my tension rising over the twists and nothing being as it seemed…Jammer being unsure of whom he could trust. This one is going on my tbr, Lex. I love a good old-fashioned thriller sometimes! Great review, as always, my friend.
Happy Wednesday! (I just realized I said happy Thursday earlier…gah! I don’t even know what day it is!) I hope you’re enjoying a wonderful day! **BIG HUGS**
Good, old-fashioned thrillers are just as important to have on our TBRs as romances, Brandee 😉 *BIG HUGS*
Wow this sounds like one gripping and intense book Lexxie^^ I love mystery thrillers myself but I don’t read nearlu enough of them! I’ll definitely be checking this one out now! Fabulous review as always ♥
You should check it out, Micheline, I really enjoyed Jammer, and how his mind worked while he was going over the details in order to figure out what had happened.
Twitter: talksupeblog
Books like this scares me. I think I’ll get a kick out of this… have you seen that Anne Hathaway movie Passenger 54 (?), is the ending for this like that? lol (I don’t mind spoilers in this case, the suspense might be the death of me)
I think you’ll get a kick out of this, too, Braine. I haven’t seen that movie, so I have no idea, sorry 🙁
I do like the sound of this one. Even though I’m not sure it’d be good for me to read with my fear of flying. Books/movies that deal with plane crashes or investigating plane crashes bother me.
If you have fear of flying, it might not be the book for you – however, we don’t really know what happened exactly when the plane crashed, we really learn about the aftermath, and Jammer is trying to figure out what happened before it happened.
Twitter: ailynk
so much feel! having to work knowing your kid’s in the plane when it crashed is kinda bad