ImposterIMPOSTER
by T. Davis Bunn

Matt Kelly mostly gets along well with his mom, except when his mother is trying to force him into the political lime-light, a place he doesn’t want to be. Matt recently graduated from school and is now working for the FBI and trying to avoid the political scene as much as he can, causing a huge rift between him and his father. Then Matt’s mother is killed by a bomb, and Matt becomes determined to find her killer.

Allen Pecard is an expert in unidentified assailants and serial imposters, and he agrees to help Matt on his quest. Allen shares professional secrets and shows Matt how an inscrutable nature can be a gift.

As they track the unknown killer back through time they discover ancient stories and secrets from the Vietnam-era. Will they be able to identify and catch the killer? And how will the knowledge they learn change Matt’s life?

T. Davis Bunn is a well-known author in many different genres. This is the first suspense book of his I’ve read. I care more for his historical books than I did this one, mainly because I don’t care for books that are political in nature, or where a main character dies early in the story.

Nevertheless, the characters are well-developed, the faith message is expertly woven in, and the story is engaging. Bunn’s fans will be interested in reading this explosive suspense, and their attention will be held through-out the book. $19.99, hardcover.300 pages.


Reviewed by Laura V. Hilton