‘The Stranger,’ by Harlan Coben

Harlan Coben is a remarkable writer of thrillers. It has been noted that he avoids profanity in his dialogue, and his use of violence is pretty restrained. Nevertheless he is capable of producing books as shocking as any you will ever read, in their own way. The Stranger is Hitchcockian in its portrayal of a very ordinary man thrust into a world of lies and mortal danger, and raises societal and existential questions as well.

Adam Price is no man of action. An easygoing type, he’s a successful eminent domain lawyer, living in a prosperous New Jersey suburb. He loves his beautiful wife and his two teenage sons. He’s “living the dream,” as one of his friends likes to say.

But, as the author is careful to emphasize, “dream” is precisely the word for their lives. Their security is insecure, their happiness fragile. Adam learns this first hand when a stranger sidles up to him after a youth lacrosse league meeting at the local American Legion, and tells him, “You didn’t have to stay with her.” Then he gives him information to prove that his wife has lied to him about something that matters deeply in their relationship.

It’s not just him who’s receiving such messages, Adam learns in time. There are people who search the internet, ferreting out secrets and blackmailing people, self-righteously believing they’re fighting the good fight against hypocrisy.

And they’re not even the worst ones….

Besides questioning our illusions of security and secrecy in the modern world, The Stranger also raises interesting questions about what they call “hacktivism” nowadays. This book is as relevant as anything you’ll read this year.

It drew me in. It fascinated me. It broke my heart. Highly recommended.

0 thoughts on “‘The Stranger,’ by Harlan Coben”

  1. I read the free sample on my Nook last night. It’s excellent writing, and just the first couple of chapters are like a gut-punch.

    This is a great book, but it’s so well-done that I’m not sure I want to read the rest.

  2. On another subject, because that’s how I roll: what do you think of the work of Neal Stephenson? I’ve got Cryptonomicon on my shelf, waiting for the Millennium to give it a read, and I recently downloaded vol. 1 of the Baroque Cycle, Quicksilver, onto my Kindle, which I also hope to get to one of these decades.

  3. I’ve never looked at Neal Stephenson. Know nothing about him. I mean, if he were really important, a man of my erudition would know about him, wouldn’t he?

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