Bourelle's new novel is 48 Hours to Kill.
[Q&A with Andrew Bourelle]
At CrimeReads Bourelle tagged four of his favorite ticking-clock thrillers, including:
61 Hours by Lee ChildRead about the other entries on the list.
Lee Child’s fourteenth Jack Reacher book is a race-against-the-clock thriller that, like [Stephen King's] The Running Man, gives the reader a clock that the protagonist isn’t aware of. The first two sentences of the book (or sentence fragments, to be precise) state the countdown from the outset: “Five minutes to three in the afternoon. Exactly sixty-one hours before it happened.” Even though we don’t know what “it” is, we’re told right from the start by this third-person omniscient narrator that something is going to happen in exactly sixty-one hours. As Jack Reacher (whose description actually does resemble Arnold Schwarzenegger) investigates a small-town murder in South Dakota, we’re continually reminded of the countdown—at first every hour, and then every few minutes. Reacher doesn’t know the countdown exists, creating a special kind of tension. Like Hitchcock’s bomb-under-the-table example, readers see the proverbial “bomb” the whole time and squirm uncomfortably as we turn the pages, waiting for Reacher to figure out he’s on a collision course with something big, even if we don’t yet know what it is.
61 Hours is among Allie Reynolds's seven chilling snowy thrillers.
--Marshal Zeringue