Sunday, August 21, 2022

The Entertainer Newspaper Review of The Defect by Jeff Bailey.

 


HEADLINE: Nuclear thriller based on terrorist attacks that didn’t make the headlines

The Defect by Jeff Bailey, Deer Hawk Publications

By Laura Kostad

A terrorist group has infiltrated the staff of Desert Canyons Nuclear Power Station (NPS) in Southern California, with the intention of triggering a total, catastrophic meltdown. Little does Operations Shift Supervisor, Brian Sing, know, but it will be up to him to coordinate the entire plant in anti-terrorist efforts as warning lights signal reactor failure.

Recurrent anomalies in the security access reporting system have irked Lenell Spector as Desert Canyons prepares for a routine refueling outage. The system’s reports have been logging personnel without the proper clearance accessing certain doors, some of whom aren’t even assigned to the Desert Canyons facility.

Her concerns are generally dismissed, however, as the reader begins to glimpse the strategic terrorist infiltration at work—their plan already in motion to destabilize the plant. The only person who takes Lenell seriously is Brian, who is attracted to her.

Character histories unfold on the page as Brian, Lenell, and other supporting characters go about their everyday lives as NPS employees. A rare richness in character depth is employed in The Defect that is not often encountered in other suspense thrillers of this genre. Readers will be refreshed in having the opportunity to get to know relatable, everyday characters that manage spectacular feats of heroism when their know-how and ingenuity are put to the ultimate test in preventing certain destruction.

A retired senior member of the science and engineering staff at PNNL, with almost fifty years’ experience in nuclear-related technologies, Murrieta, California author, Jeff Bailey, is well-equipped to take readers deep into the belly of a nuclear power station and a subversive plot to undermine it.

Bailey said that The Defect is based on two real-life events: The Three Mile Island NPS nuclear accident, and the little-known, 2013 Watts Bar NPS attack in Tennessee, which was perpetrated by a lone gunman.

Technical detail isn’t taken for granted in the midst of the plot’s riveting suspense. “My book had to undergo a security clearance with the Department of Energy before publication,” Bailey said. As the story builds momentum, and the Middle Eastern terrorist group rehearses their intricate plot, readers receive an intimate, inside look at the everyday inner workings and operations of the plant, and how one small defect can either be exploited by villains, or alternatively save the day.

Readers will also appreciate Bailey’s treatment of the Middle Eastern terrorist group that’s organizing the attack. All too often, genre fiction writers and screenwriters show the public faceless, single-minded terrorist characters that perpetuate harmful stereotypes of Middle Eastern culture. Bailey departed from this norm and really took the time to flesh out the individual members of the terrorist group, going so far as to paint a detailed picture of their personal background and what led them to their roles in the events of The Defect.

Readers certainly won’t sympathize or empathize with how these characters have chosen to deal with their past, but we can respect them as individuals who have suffered—as fellow people like ourselves—and not just a stigmatized enemy, as contemporary, reductionist political rhetoric often suggests.

The Defect is available in paperback through local bookstores, Amazon, and Barnes and Noble. The Kindle E-book is available at through Amazon online.

Mr. Bailey's second book Not On My Watch is also available in paperback through Amazon, and Barnes and Noble. The Kindle E-book is also available through Amazon online. Bailey already has 12 more stories planned for future installments in his nuclear thriller series.


For more on Laura Kostad, go to her Wordpress Home Page or follow her on Amazon, LinkedIn, and at  the Tri-Cities Journal of Business.

For more on Jeff Bailey, check out his web page or follow him on AmazonGoodReads or his LinkedIn Blog.

 

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