WINNER OF THE 2023 INDEPENDENT PRESS AWARD FOR BEST TECHNOTHRILLER
By all accounts, Lincoln Webber has the life he wanted - a beautiful girlfriend, his own company, and a sweet side gig teaching a few college courses in the heart of Boston. But when one of Link's star students goes missing just days before finals, and all of the evidence points to him, his world quickly collapses. A cyber professor who is more than capable of covering his digital tracks, Link soon realizes that the missing girl is just the start of his problems when another student turns up dead. With his career and personal relationships on the line, the threats come at him on multiple fronts as he tries to clear his name and find the missing girl. Seeing isn't always believing, and nothing is as it seems in this thrilling sequel to Access Point.
This sequel follows up with the mild mannered, dad-joke-popping, Link Webber, not long after his journey in book 1. You could’ve just thought life might have eased up on him, but you’d be dead wrong, because from beginning to end, he’s got a huge bullseye on his back. Framed and on the run, this book takes on everything that worked so well in the first instalment, and dials it up to 11! Character dialogue is natural and witty, scenes described with passion and detail, and it’s unrelenting. Always avoiding spoilers, but this book also merges the first into its story, without becoming overbearing, and it also feels like EJ went bigger and bolder on this. Cracking book for all lovers of suspense and cyber thriller!
E.J. Yerzak has done it again with this second book in the Link Webber series. The plot is well thought out with dialogue and scenes that are heart pounding and gripping with suspense. This second thriller book, like the first one does not disappoint. The reader is drawn in from the start with a riveting story of deceit, cyber-crime, kidnapping and murder that will keep you hanging on the edge of your seat. His characters are rich, engaging and well framed in the story. I highly recommend it.
I enjoyed the first book in the series and whilst the premise in this book was interesting, the author appeared to overly describe things, going over several pages describing what was being said. Thus became distracting and nearly made me give up reading on several occasions.