cover image Before the Fall

Before the Fall

Noah Hawley, read by Robert Petkoff. Hachette Audio, , unabridged, 10 CDs, 13 hrs., $35 ISBN 978-1-4789-8759-8

Hawley, an Emmy-winning television producer and writer, starts his fifth novel with a riveting event that reader Petkoff dramatizes to full effect: on a moonless night, a private plane carrying 11 people from Martha’s Vineyard to New York, crashes into the Atlantic. Scott Burroughs, a young artist, survives. He’s preparing for an impossibly long swim with a damaged shoulder when he discovers another survivor, a four-year-old boy. Hawley makes their swim as arduous as possible, with Petkoff adding a breathlessness to Burroughs’s progress and terror to the boy’s fearful cries. Their arrival on shore is just the start of a book that is part mystery (what caused the crash?), part thriller (past the swim, Burroughs is subjected to ruthless and uncompromising media scrutiny), and part social study (Hawley provides complex backstories of those aboard the flight, from the pilot and crew to the wealthy, powerful passengers). In unfolding the story, Hawley sets a fast pace, hopscotching from present to past. Petkoff delivers each shift in chronology and in characters smoothly and clearly, adding the proper emotional touches but being careful to narrate this story of redemption without sentimentality. [em]A Grand Central hardcover. (May) [/em]