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review 2018-09-04 04:32
An entertaining thriller follow-up that almost lives up to its predecessor.
The Cleansweep Counterstrike - Chuck Waldron

This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader as part of a Book Tour stop which includes a giveaway and Q&A with the author.
---

Let me preface all this by saying that I enjoyed The Cleansweep Counterstrike, I thought it was a fun return to the characters of the first book. I had some problems with it -- that weren't so bad that they kept me from enjoying this book, but they diminished my appreciation. I do talk about them below, and to adequately express them takes some space -- so much so that it dominates my post. This isn't because I didn't like the book -- it's just that I wanted to be sure I explained my thinking. So I'm stressing at the outset -- I recommend this book, I liked it and I think that other readers will, too.

 

Ahab had his whale, Coyote has his Road Runner and Charles Claussen has Matt Tremain (and the others that helped him out in The Cleansweep Conspiracy). Claussen lost a lot -- not just in terms of influence of money, either -- when Tremain's investigations helped bring his Cleansweep project down. Now on the run from his former bank-rollers and trying to keep under the radar of law enforcement, Claussen risks everything to get his revenge.

 

Tremain and his friends have moved on in their lives and careers -- but you get the impression that they haven't stopped looking over their shoulder for something to come at them for their role in Cleansweeps failure -- not just Claussen, either. He may have been the front man, but no one thinks that he's the only one that might bear a grudge.

After he gets his revenge, Claussen does plan on trying to get some mercy from his benefactors -- and maybe see if he can demonstrate that Cleansweep can work in another country. But first things first.

 

I am so glad that Waldron took this approach to things -- I went in apprehensive that this would be Conspiracy Redux -- somehow the people behind Claussen were trying it in a new city/country (or worse, they were trying again in Toronoto under a different name) and that Tremain and company had taken it upon themselves to head off to the new location to do the same thing they'd done at home. I just wasn't ready for the tortured logic that would make it possible. Instead, it's all about the fallout from Conspiracy -- good and bad for all involved, and all parties trying to go on with their lives, obsessions, and whatnot. Everyone except Claussen, that is. He's still stuck in the moment, making him the proverbial fly in the ointment for everyone.

 

Like in Conspiracy, there's some issues with time -- how much time went by before Claussen starts his efforts at revenge, how long before Tremain and Carling go hunting for Claussen, for example -- there's a couple other spoiler-y items that I'm confused on the timing about, too. Yes, Waldron gives plenty of clues about the time, but some of them are pretty vague and some of them come so late into the game that by the time he says anything about it, it's too late and the reader is already a bit muddled on details. That could just be me, but I don't think so. On the flip side, there's some things in Tremain's personal life that move so quickly (I think) that they're hard to believe. The key there is to not fight it, not insist that everything's crystal clear -- and the book will sweep you up in the hunt and you'll stop caring. And, when it comes to the things that are important -- he doesn't miss a step. It's only in the setup, the subplots, the background, etc. that things get muddled.

 

Once Claussen starts to move in and really gets the four worried about what he's up to and what might happen to them, the book comes together and all the little quibbles vanish. There's danger afoot, hazards everywhere and they all will have to be ready to adapt to any strange circumstance if they're going to get out of this alive and intact.

 

We spent plenty of time with Claussen in Conspiracy -- and we get even more here. Early on, almost every line of dialogue, every thought of his that's recorded is as diabolically evil as it could be -- which made it so hard to swallow. But after a while, that goes away. And you can almost reach the point where you want to see Claussen escape a little longer so that when he does come for Tremain, the whole thing will be a tinge more exciting.

 

My main problem with this novel is that we don't get nearly enough time with Tremain and his allies -- so much of that part of the story feels rushed and under-cooked. I'd like more time with Carling, Remy and Susan. Yes, Tremain is the focus -- and should be -- but we get almost nothing about the other three when they're not playing backup to Tremain. Carling is the most neglected (which I don't think will be a problem in the next book), keeping him the one I want to learn most about -- Tremain's Russian hacker benefactor would be a close second.

Angela Vaughn, Claussen's former security chief, was one of the highlights of Conspiracy for me -- and she has a great moment or two here. But sadly, just a moment or two. I'm glad that Waldron brought her back for this book, I just wish he'd done more with her.

 

The criminals and mercenaries that Claussen surrounds himself with and/or is surrounded with (it's a fine, but important, distinction you can learn about yourself) aren't as compelling. Those that are competent vacillate between almost too capable to believe and have they ever done anything more complicated than hold up a liquor store?

 

Conspiracy felt plausible, maybe some of it was a stretch, but it still struck me as something not too far-fetched, and the stakes felt real. On the whole, Counterstrike is probably closer to plausible, but the stakes didn't -- maybe because it felt so unlikely that someone like Claussen could be so focused on his revenge -- so short-sighted about the dangers inherent in pursuing it (from the government, his backers, other enemies he's made). But it's that Ahab-like focus that drives the novel, so you have to accept it. Once you do -- the rest is easy to buy into.

 

Once again, this novel is close to be a great thriller, but it misses by an inch or two on many fronts -- some are minor quibbles, some are more than that -- but you get enough of those and it's hard to be enthusiastic about the book as you could've been. Maybe I'm wrong, but it feels like this is a draft or two away from being at that point (would a Toronto police detective call the FBI "the Feds"?). For every thing that I grumbled about above (or put in my notes and didn't bring up because I was starting to feel like I was being negative), Waldron nails 3-4 other things. The story is there, I simply don't think that Waldron told it as effectively as he could've.

 

I don't want this post to come across as negative, I'm just underwhelmed. I enjoyed it -- I don't think it's as good as Conspiracy, but it's a worthwhile continuation, and should make the reader keen to get their hands on Book 3. Given where Waldron leaves things, it has the makings of a pretty strong installment.

 

Disclaimer: This book was provided to me by the author in exchange for my honest thoughts.

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text 2018-07-23 08:10
Release Blitz - Clean Sweep

 

It's time to get swept! Clean Sweep by Kate Willoughby is NOW LIVE!

 

 

AVAILABLE EVERYWHERE:

 

 

Amazon(kindle) → https://amzn.to/2tP92Fd

Apple(iBooks)→ https://apple.co/2yNLNkn

B&N(Nook)→ http://bit.ly/2KmL1zz

Kobo(Rakuten) → http://bit.ly/2Kc0PWh

 

 

 

 

BLURB:

 

He’s a hockey player, not a housekeeper.

 

Cameron Bowes is the face of the San Francisco Dragons, so when the team needs a gimmick to improve their fan relations, Cameron becomes the focus of the new video "At Home with a Dragon". Unfortunately for Cam, his bachelor pad looks like an earthquake hit it. Repeatedly.

 

She’s the sexy maid a teammate hires as a joke.

 

Dakota Kelly has been working non-stop since she was unexpectedly awarded custody of her young niece. Though the little girl's grandmother swooped in to help, the old woman's overbearing ways have left Dakota no choice but to work as a janitor and moonlight as a maid in the hopes of one day getting some much-needed space from her niece's highly controlling Nana. Lucky for Cam, Dakota turns out to be the miracle worker he desperately needs, and he jumps at the chance to hire her as his live-in housekeeper. Soon, the two can no longer ignore their smoldering chemistry, and it seems turning their business relationship into a happily-ever-after for all three of them will be the next play. There's just one problem: Nana doesn't approve, and she's not about to let her granddaughter go without a fight.

 

Clean Sweep may be read and enjoyed as a standalone sports romance!

 

 

About Kate:

 

Kate is in love with the sport of hockey. And the entire Los Angeles Kings team. Having lived most of her life completely uninterested in professional sports, she is surprised at the intensity of her enthusiasm and her growing collection of Kings merchandise. She has held a variety of jobs—podiatrist’s assistant, telemarketer, typist, gift wrapper, painter, illustrator’s assistant, paste-up artist, calligrapher, teacher, transcriptionist and barista—but her favorite by far is author. 

 

Kate resides in Los Angeles with her husband, their two sons, and a Chihuahua named Mochi. She is also a member of the Romance Writers of America, Los Angeles Romance Authors, and Santa Clarita Romance Writers, and winner of the 2009 EPPIE Award for Best Fantasy/Paranormal Erotic Romance and the 2016 EPPIE Award for Best Contemporary Romance.

 

Find Kate Online!

Amazon → https://amzn.to/2sFChKF

BookBub → http://bit.ly/2xQPsgW

Facebook → http://bit.ly/2JsxYJf

Goodreads → http://bit.ly/2Jq4Py0

Twitter → http://bit.ly/2JyMAdc

Website → http://katewilloughbyauthor.com

 

 

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text 2018-06-25 08:05
Teaser Share - Clean Sweep

 

Get swept -- off your feet! Kate Willoughby's Clean Sweep will be here July 23rd!!!

 

FOLLOW KATE FOR RELEASE ALERTS → http://bit.ly/2xQPsgW

ADD CLEAN SWEEP TO YOUR TBR → http://bit.ly/2JSLEkK

 

 

 

BLURB:

 

He’s a hockey player, not a housekeeper.

 

Cameron Bowes is the face of the San Francisco Dragons, so when the team needs a gimmick to improve their fan relations, Cameron becomes the focus of the new video "At Home with a Dragon". Unfortunately for Cam, his bachelor pad looks like an earthquake hit it. Repeatedly.

 

She’s the sexy maid a teammate hires as a joke.

 

Dakota Kelly has been working non-stop since she was unexpectedly awarded custody of her young niece. Though the little girl's grandmother swooped in to help, the old woman's overbearing ways have left Dakota no choice but to work as a janitor and moonlight as a maid in the hopes of one day getting some much-needed space from her niece's highly controlling Nana.

 

Lucky for Cam, Dakota turns out to be the miracle worker he desperately needs, and he jumps at the chance to hire her as his live-in housekeeper. Soon, the two can no longer ignore their smoldering chemistry, and it seems turning their business relationship into a happily-ever-after for all three of them will be the next play. There's just one problem: Nana doesn't approve, and she's not about to let her granddaughter go without a fight.

 

Clean Sweep may be read and enjoyed as a standalone sports romance!

 

 

 

 

About Kate:

 

Kate is in love with the sport of hockey. And the entire Los Angeles Kings team. Having lived most of her life completely uninterested in professional sports, she is surprised at the intensity of her enthusiasm and her growing collection of Kings merchandise. She has held a variety of jobs—podiatrist’s assistant, telemarketer, typist, gift wrapper, painter, illustrator’s assistant, paste-up artist, calligrapher, teacher, transcriptionist and barista—but her favorite by far is author. She resides in Los Angeles with her husband, their two sons, and a Chihuahua named Mochi. She is also a member of the Romance Writers of America, Los Angeles Romance Authors, and Santa Clarita Romance Writers, and winner of the 2009 EPPIE Award for Best Fantasy/Paranormal Erotic Romance and the 2016 EPPIE Award for Best Contemporary Romance.

 

Find Kate Online!

 

 

Amazon → https://amzn.to/2sFChKF

BookBub → http://bit.ly/2xQPsgW

Facebook → http://bit.ly/2JsxYJf

Goodreads → http://bit.ly/2Jq4Py0

Twitter → http://bit.ly/2JyMAdc

Website → http://katewilloughbyauthor.com

 

 

 

 

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review 2016-07-14 13:28
Review for The CleanSweep Conspiracy by Chuck Waldron
The CleanSweep Conspiracy - Chuck Waldron

The CleanSweep Conspiracy

REVIEW

 

I love a good conspiracy novel and The CleanSweep Conspiracy by Chuck Waldron keeps my beliefs alive. The CleanSweep got my attention from the opening pages and if you don’t believe that there is more going on than meets the eye, you may want to get informed.

 

Matt is a blogger…do you post your true thoughts and feelings about controversial subjects? Would your name be on a watch list? Matt has a bulls-eye on his back and It is time for him to put all his emergency preparations into play. Will it be enough to save him?

 

We live Matt’s life. Those in power use the threat of terrorism and fear to watch us all. How much are you willing to give up? Are we…right now…being watched and listened to 24 hours a day? What do you think?

 

Who is to say who has value…the billionaire or the homeless. Whose life is worth sacrificing? Once the criminals, homeless, junkies…are gone, who is next? Where does it end?

 

The suspense builds, then relents, only to build again. My fear for the characters kept me reading and thinking about current events. Sure they might not be exactly the same as what Chuck Waldron has going on in The CleanSweep Conspiracy, but politicians are always muddying the waters, keeping us distracted, like a magician. If you are watching the right hand, you don’t know what the left one is doing. My conspiracy beliefs are alive and well and maybe yours should be too.

 

I received a copy of The CleanSweep Conspiracy by Chuck Waldron in return for an honest review.

Animated Animals. Pictures, Images and Photos  4 Stars

 

Click here to read more.

 

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Source: www.fundinmental.com/kindle-giveaway-review-for-the-cleansweep-conspiracy
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review 2016-06-03 01:06
An entertaining thriller that's just a shade away from being great.
The CleanSweep Conspiracy - Chuck Waldron

Matt Tremain is a man on the run -- authorities are broadcasting his picture all over, the police are hunting for him. Not a typical reaction to a tech/privacy blogger (this blogger would like that amount, not kind, of attention) -- but that's the impact that his stories about CleanSweep are possibly having. At the very least, he's got a few very influential people paying attention, and that's enough for the powers behind CleanSweep to want him quieted.

 

Thankfully, he has some allies who have his back -- both in Toronto, and around the world, so he's able to escape the initial attempts to bring him in. Unsure who to trust, he's living as off-of-the-grid as he possibly can (while maintaining his blog as much as he can -- not easy).

 

Still, this just emboldens him, as well as showing him that the clock is running, and he won't be able to do anything to prevent this from becoming permanent soon. So Matt, a couple of allies in the press, one in law enforcement, and a few he hasn't met yet, get busier at exposing what they believe to be a conspiracy devoted to stamping out undesirable elements in society. Toronto will be ground zero, but it won't be long before this Conspiracy moves to other parts of the world, destroying privacy, civil liberties and lives along the way. Dystopia looms large in these pages, not one decades or centuries away, either; this is a 15-minutes into the future dystopia.

 

I can't talk much more about the plot -- or most of the characters -- without giving too much away. So I'll just say there are a lot of well-drawn characters trying to do their best at work here. Without exception, everyone of Matt's allies would be someone I'd like to have more of (not saying that we didn't get sufficient time with them, just that they were interesting enough to have around more).

 

And then there are (for wont of a different phrase) the bad guys. With one exception (Claussen's security chief, Angela Vaughn), these are not well drawn, or that interesting -- they're evil, and that's about it. Which makes it easier to root against them, but harder to get invested in them as characters.

 

I've got a couple of minor quibbles, and one that's pretty big. First, for people thus concerned with being spied on, Matt and his allies sure do use their smartphones a lot. Also, the timeline is sometimes too hard to track with, it's unclear frequently when we're getting a flashback -- and how far back we're flashing -- or when we're back to "the present." Lastly, governmental agencies move a little too quickly at the end -- probably the hardest part to believe.

 

My biggest problem with the book was, to me, fairly significant, and ended up toning down my enthusiasm for recommending it. There's a chapter (maybe two, but I'm pretty sure it was one) wherein Claussen meets with the men with the money and government clout needed to fully implement his plan. A lot of what is revealed about the plan, we readers knew and/or surmised from what had been hinted at, suggested, etc. before. But before it had been shown to us, here it was told to us. And not in a very interesting way -- it was basically the part of a James Bond flick where the villain tells Bond his plan just before he leaves him to die (which, of course, he doesn't). This time there were no Bonds around, just the people who'd enable the villain's plan. The evil was as plain as day here, and told in the kind of detail no one needed -- the only thing missing from this were the conspirators twirling their mustaches. Seriously, you take out this chapter (or edit it a lot), and this book would've got a higher rating from me.

 

Add a little more gray to this, tone down the villains just a shade, and you've got yourself a knock out. As it is, it's a pretty good read -- and a chilling reminder of what could be around the corner. The tech feels real, the police state imposed doesn't sound that far-fetched, the aims of the conspirators carry the feel of legitimacy. This rings entirely of something that could've been ripped from the headlines -- but thankfully wasn't (I think). You will keep turning pages, wanting to know what happens to Matt and the rest -- you'll appreciate some small flashes of humanity and the courage that resides in unlikely places.

 

Give this one a shot. Not only will you probably enjoy this, but like me, you'll want to get your hands on more by Waldron.

 

Disclaimer: This book was provided to me by the author in exchange for my honest thoughts.

Source: irresponsiblereader.com/2016/06/02/the-cleansweep-conspiracy-by-chuck-waldron
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