The Anchor
by
Kevin R. Doyle
Mystery
Publisher: Night to Dawn
Publication Date: October 10, 2022
Page count: 265 pages
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SYNOPSIS:
Jen has toiled away in television news, just waiting for a big break. And at the same time she finally gets a shot at the promotion opportunity she’s waited years for, head anchor for the nightly newscast, an unseen, shadowy man is desperate for her to notice him. When messages and well wishes don’t do the trick, her mysterious admirer intends to do anything necessary to make Jen a success and snare her attention, even if it means attacking her fiancĂ© and killing off her competition.
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READ AN EXCERPT:
One of the first pieces of advice Lew Jacobs had given her upon promoting her to the morning desk had been to toughen up as much as possible.
And to do it right away.
“You’re going to get people calling, e-mailing, and tweeting in. Hell, we still have a working fax machine in the office for people to complain that way. Don’t worry about the Contact page on the website. The only folks who use that are the ones who want to say how much they like what you’re doing. But you know the old saying about restaurant service, right?”
Jen had given him a blank look. The boss had continued.
“A satisfied customer will tell one or two people what a great meal he had at your place. A dissatisfied one will tell everyone he knows what a shithole operation you have. Sorry for the profanity, kid, but that’s the best way to put it.”
Jen had nodded, still not sure of his overall point.
“When it comes to the station website, the ones who take the time to type in all those required fields, plus muck around with matching those damned security words at the bottom, are so patient because they want to go on and on about how much they love your show or a story you did. But the ones who are pissed at you, and that’s going to be the overwhelming majority, they can’t wait that long. They have to fire off their opinions as quick as possible. And believe me, they will. You could do an entire broadcast around the theme of puppies and rainbows, and some nitwit will call in, complaining that your material is too dark.”
Before her promotion to the desk, Jen had worked as a general assignment reporter for a little over three years. She’d thought she understood the phenomenon of irate, dissatisfied viewers venting at the station. But listening to Jacobs, she’d realized that what waited for her was a whole new level of said phenomenon.
And she assumed he knew what he was talking about. Jen wasn’t sure how old her boss was, but considering that he’d begun with the station as a reporter himself back in the mid-seventies, he had to be somewhere up in the higher range of his sixties.
Jacobs was a dinosaur in more ways than his age, however. A legend both at the station and in the Riverside community overall, he was one of those rare news people ending his career, decades later, at the same place where he started. He was damned good at his job, and Jen figured that somewhere over the years, some bigger stations must have recruited him in larger markets, but for some reason, he’d elected to stay here in central Kansas.
It took no time at all for her to realize how on the nose Jacobs’s cautions had been. Sometimes, people would call in or tweet, full of umbrage that Jen had dared to include on the Monday morning news the results of the NFL game the day before when their favorite team had been shellacked.
The tone something along the lines of how dare she perpetuate such a demoralizing story.
Now, seeing a message appear five minutes after the show closed, she hurried to trace back over every story and segment they’d done, even the ones piped in from the national network, looking for something she’d done wrong. With the possibility of Karyn’s nighttime slot opening soon, Jen knew she couldn’t be doing anything that would cause her to lose points in management’s eyes.
Her initial mental scan not uncovering anything, she mentally said the hell with it and opened the message. She didn’t recognize the sender’s address, but maybe it was something innocuous.
Even congratulatory.
Then again, maybe not.
The message contained a single sentence, done in all caps.
I THOUGHT I DID YOU A FAVOR. DID YOU REALLY HAVE TO SIC THE COPS ON ME?
REVIEW:
5 stars!
Is an obsessed fan trying to improve a young news anchor's chance at the top spot?
The Anchor is a new crime thriller from the pen of veteran storyteller Kevin R. Doyle, and once again, he does not disappoint. The story, told from multiple viewpoints, is a riveting tale and initially unfolds from several seemingly unrelated directions. But the author skillfully takes each divergent plotline and weaves together an amazing whole. From the start, I was invested in the story, compelled to keep reading well past midnight, confronted by one twist and turn after another. Although there were some clever indications of who was behind everything, I failed to make the connections up front and was completely surprised by the reveal.
Each of the main characters, through whose eyes the story is told, is engaging in their own ways. Jen, hoping to win the lead anchor's slot, is a competent news spokesperson but still seems vulnerable and insecure over her future when telling her view of events. Her coworker Bryan Aldiss, hot on the trail of a big story, is a sympathetic friend but is frequently heard to give Jen constructive criticism regarding her attitude and demeanor in the newsroom. He's more tuned in to what's going on around him than any of the others. The progress of the police investigations into the different cases are revealed through the eyes of the hard-working Crimes Against Persons' detectives, Benson and Loftin. The reflections by "The Georgia Man" give a chilling insight into the city's criminal underbelly and cleverly tease hints, clues, and a few red herrings.
I recommend THE ANCHOR to readers of crime fiction and thrillers and those interested in what goes on behind the scenes at a television newsroom.
A high-school teacher, former college instructor,
and fiction writer, Kevin R. Doyle is the author of numerous short horror stories. He’s also written three crime thrillers, The Group, When You Have to Go There, and And the Devil Walks Away, and one horror novel, The Litter. In the last few years, he’s begun working on the Sam Quinton private eye series, published by Camel Press. The first Quinton book, Squatter’s Rights, was nominated for the 2021 Shamus award for Best First PI Novel. The second book, Heel Turn, was released in March of 2021, while the third in the series, Double Frame, came out in March of 2022. The fourth Sam Quinton book, Clean Win, will be released in March of
2023.
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ReplyDeleteWow, thanks so much for your kind review. It's really appreciated. I'm off to work now, but will check back in later today for any comments or questions.
ReplyDeleteI liked the excerpt.
ReplyDeleteThe book sounds fantastic. I love the cover!
ReplyDelete