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Strike me down : a novel / Mindy Mejia.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : Emily Bestler Books/Atria, 2020Edition: First Emily Bestler Books/Atria Books hardcover editionDescription: 337 pages ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9781982133238
  • 1982133236
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Item type Current library Collection Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Phillipsburg Free Public Library Adult Fiction Adult Fiction FIC MEJIA Available 36748002473348
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Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

"Ingenious...sexy...carefully plotted."-- The New York Times Book Review

From the critically acclaimed author of Leave No Trace , the "nail-biting page-turner that grabs you early and never lets go" ( The Real Book Spy ), comes a visceral thriller where a high stakes crime triggers a woman's complicated and potentially deadly search for the truth.

Nora Trier catches thieves. As a forensic accountant and partner in her downtown Minneapolis firm, she's unearthed millions in every corner of the world. She prides herself on her independence, the most essential currency of accounting, until her firm is hired by Strike.

An anti-corporate, feminist athletic empire, Strike is owned by Logan Russo, a brash and legendary kickboxer, and her marketing genius husband, Gregg Abbott. They're about to host a major kickboxing tournament with twenty million dollars in prize money, and the chance for the champion to become the new face of the company. Gregg suspects his wife already has a new face in mind--a young trainer named Aaden, for whom Logan feels an unexpected connection.

Days before the tournament begins, it's discovered that the prize money is missing. Gregg hires Nora's firm to find both the thief and the money but Nora has a secret connection to Strike that threatens her independence. Her partner pressures her into taking the case anyway, hinting he has information about Strike that could change the course of the investigation in a shocking and deadly way.

A tense and unpredictable thriller that will keep you guessing until the very last page, Strike Me Down reveals the remarkable power of Mindy Mejia's writing which "crosses back and forth between exquisite literary descriptions and thrilleresque escapes and acts of violence" ( New York Journal of Books ).

Excerpt provided by Syndetics

1. Nora NORA One Week Earlier "FRAUD KILLS." Nora allowed the words time to land on the crowd, a full audience of mostly twentysomethings with brand-new CPA licenses still crisp inside their wallets. "You've all heard, at some point in your lives, the lie that fraud is a white-collar crime, a victimless crime." She paced the length of the stage, heels marking the distance between the darkened aisles. "Sam White was the founder and president of Computech, a microchip manufacturer that weathered the tech crash with little more than a shrug and a few treasury stock purchases. They employed ten thousand people and maintained manufacturing facilities in China, Mexico, and Ohio, with headquarters in Minneapolis." The screen behind Nora flashed to a wall-sized scene of a rocky beach where a group of people squinted into the sun. Two teenage boys corralled a pair of dogs while a middle-aged couple, both fit and wearing their gray with ease, corralled the boys. The entire family was frozen mid-laugh. "Sam White built Computech from his parents' garage into a Fortune 500 company in less than two decades. For five years they boasted the highest gross profit percentage in the tech sector worldwide, until a whistle-blower inside the company exposed a major misstatement scheme. The SEC opened an investigation into securities fraud, share prices plummeted, and three weeks after the scandal broke in the Wall Street Journal , Sam White shot himself in the head." The room, massive as it was, had fallen completely silent. No one sipped their complimentary coffee. No one checked their phones. Two hundred faces stared at the one smiling down at them, the larger-than-life father hugging his son to his dead chest. Nora glanced at the picture, a familiar swill of emotion clotting her throat, but her voice carried clearly as she swiveled back to the young accountants eager to kick-start their careers. "Sam White was forty-seven years old when he died. Computech declared bankruptcy less than two months into the SEC investigation and thousands of people lost their jobs, including me. "I was the whistle-blower." Fraud, whether it was a petty cash scheme or a multibillion-dollar revenue inflation, required three essential elements. The first was opportunity; the thief needed access to the assets or financial statements. The second ingredient was pressure. Maybe that meant a gambling problem and a silent, ballooning debt or a sick family member accumulating hundreds of thousands of dollars in hospital bills. The pressure could be professional--the imperative to outperform competitors or meet investor expectations--but whatever the form, the person was under stress. They spent nights awake, withdrawn from family life, suffering from headaches, upset stomach, constipation, muscle tremors, and chest pains. They had trouble performing sexually. Both of those elements--opportunity and pressure--existed ubiquitously. Millions of employees around the world were entrusted with financial authority simply because someone had to write the checks; someone had to approve the journal entries. And stress was the postrecession way of life, the corporate imperative to do more with less. Despite having the opportunity and feeling the pressure, employees didn't commit fraud until the final, game-changing factor came into play: rationalization. The thief had to find a way to reconcile the crime within their individual moral framework. They created a narrative in which their actions were justified, even righteous. They deserved what they stole. They deserved so much more. "Sam White took a skydiving trip with his family the summer before I discovered the fraud." After two hours of lecturing on the basics of fraud detection, Nora always wrapped up the presentation by circling back to the beginning. "I hadn't noticed the behavioral pattern, but it was there in plain sight. Sam loved parasailing, skiing in the Rockies, and jumping out of airplanes. He had a risk-taking personality." Nora felt the eyes in the room, full of silent questions pressing in on all sides, but every time she locked on a face in the audience, their gaze skittered away, as if embarrassed to be caught paying attention. They wouldn't make it as forensic accountants if they were afraid to look without flinching, to unearth what lay beneath through the power of a protracted and deliberate stare. "We operate in an economy that glamorizes risk. It's embedded in the very heart of the American dream--the entrepreneurial spirit. Business owners constantly risk failure with every decision they make, and the bigger the risk, the potentially bigger the reward. When a high-stakes risk pays off, when a company hits on the product of the year, the money and recognition instantly follow. The risk-taking personality is compelled to chase bigger and bigger rewards. It feeds them and can override many of their ingrained ethical checkpoints. Does every skydiving CEO commit financial statement fraud? Of course not. But your job, your ethical duty as CPAs, is to monitor the risk environment of your company and understand the elements of the fraud triangle. "Opportunity. Pressure. Rationalization. This is the birthing ground of crime." A dozen people approached Nora afterward, asking follow-up questions or sharing their own war stories about corporate theft. Nora made the appropriate noises, handed out her firm's business cards, and offered general, conservative guidance while the seminar handlers herded them into the hallway so they could set up the next presentation. As the attendees dispersed, Nora glanced toward the opposite ballroom where a crowd still gathered around their presenter, a tall, lanky man who'd gravitated to the food table and was making short work of the remaining croissants. He chatted, laughed, and gestured with a coffee cup while the staff tried in vain to clear the buffet. When he spotted Nora watching him, arms crossed and one eyebrow raised, he winked. "Excuse me." A tender pantsuit, who must have been hovering in the background, complimented the lecture before nervously clearing her throat and asking the question Nora had learned to expect since she'd started giving this talk five years ago. "Did you feel responsible?" the girl asked. "For Sam White's death?" "I didn't commit the fraud or put the gun in his mouth." Nora thanked her and watched her leave. "You didn't answer her question." Corbett MacDermott stepped up beside her, brushing bits of croissant off his shirt. Nora ignored her partner's pointed look. She didn't have to answer the question, not for Corbett, because he already knew what she wouldn't say. "Let's go." It was hard to watch a company collapse, run into sixty-year-olds working as cashiers because their pensions were worthless, and testify in trials that put your colleagues in prison, without feeling at least partially responsible. It was even harder when your boss had been your father's best friend. For as long as Nora could remember, the Whites and the Triers had vacationed together. She'd spent summers babysitting Sam's kids, beating one at tag and the other at chess. Later, Sam hired her right out of college as a junior accountant at Computech, constantly bragging that she was his big gun in the finance department. When Nora uncovered the company's scheme to inflate profits, she'd gone straight to Sam, assuming he would be as outraged as she had been to find the fraud. Instead, Sam gaslit her, telling her she didn't understand complex accounting. Then he tried to bribe her with a higher salary, and finally he resorted to guilt: Nora wouldn't ruin him, would she? Not after everything Sam had done for her. "We're family, Nora," he said, reaching over the evidence she'd compiled and covering her hand with his perspiring one. "I need you to help protect our family now." Nora nodded, gathered her notes, and went to look up the number for the SEC. Less than a month later, Sam was dead. After Computech collapsed, Sam's wife had a breakdown. The kids Nora had once babysat started sending her hate mail. Even her own parents stopped talking to her. Nora got used to lying awake nights in bed, staring at the rotating blades of the ceiling fan. She inventoried the peas on her dinner plate, lined them up in neat rows of ten before scraping the food into the trash. She thought about moving away, but before she could decide where to go a different path presented itself. An older man greeted Nora in the courthouse lobby as she left one of the trials. "I believe you're out of a job, Ms. Trier." The card he handed her was thick and embossed. Jim Parrish , it read. Parrish Forensics . "I've got a few irons in the fire." She had three unreturned calls in to temp agencies and a head hunter who'd actually laughed in her face. Whistle-blowers might have legal protections under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, but no one wanted to hire someone who rocked the boat. "Have you considered forensic accounting?" Nora had never actually heard the term before, which in retrospect should have been embarrassing. She said something about CSI and swirling tubes of DNA at crime scenes, which made Jim chuckle. "We stay away from bodily fluids, but the principle is the same. Fraud costs this great country of ours forty to fifty billion in direct, measurable dollars every year. Corporate boards, CFOs, and CEOs like yours who don't care about the lives of their employees or customers, so long as they can squeeze a few million more. It's bloodless, calculated crime and forensic accountants are the ones who are smart enough to not only catch them, but explain to a judge and jury exactly how they did it." He nodded at the business card. "We make the bloodless bleed." Nora still didn't understand exactly what forensic accounting entailed, but she was also sleep-deprived, exiled from her family, and living off the last thousand dollars in her savings account. She pocketed the card and offered Jim Parrish her hand. That was fifteen years, a hundred audits, countless investigations, and sixty-five convictions ago. The summer after Nora came on board, Jim hired Corbett MacDermott, an Irish transplant who specialized in artificial intelligence, and he and his wife began having one baby per year like they were doing a companion experiment in organic intelligence. Corbett liked to stroll into Nora's office at the end of the day and talk about cases while she worked over three monitors and her analysts bustled in and out. Both of them bought into the partnership at the same time and they celebrated with a round of beer at Ike's, which had turned into a round twice a week ever since. "You've got to let Sam White go." Corbett said as they walked into the skyway, leaving the conference hotel behind. "He's been dead for fifteen years." Nora replied. "I think he's sufficiently gone." "You know what I mean." "How was your seminar?" While she'd taught the principles of fraud detection, Corbett had lectured on developments in artificial intelligence, a topic that consistently drew audiences from across the country. Corbett chuckled. "Steering me back into my box, are we?" Nora smiled and pointed to the sandwich board of one of Corbett's favorite lunch spots. "Your pork belly ramen's on special today." "And now she's speaking my love language." Laughing again, he elbowed her in the shoulder as they joined the pedestrian traffic flowing above the streets of downtown Minneapolis. Nora had always appreciated the planning and design of the Minneapolis skyway. She'd taken an underground tour of Seattle on a business trip once and marveled at how the entire elevation of the city had risen one story, leaving a ghost town of empty storefronts and subterranean alleys beneath it. The Minneapolis skyway was similar, except the actual ground hadn't shifted at all. The streets, sidewalks, and plazas remained where they'd always been, crowded with food trucks in the summer and coated with a gristle of snow and ice in the winter. The skyway simply layered another city on top of all that. Glass-encased walkways connected every skyscraper in downtown, a ten-mile labyrinth of convenience stores, salons, bakeries, sushi counters, farm-to-table hot spots, burger joints, and pop-ups for every conceivable Kickstarter product and signature-starved petition. It was the largest system of enclosed, second-story bridges in the world and, for Nora and Corbett, it was home. "Where are we going for lunch?" "You're on your own." Nora swerved to avoid a group of businessmen as her partner stopped abruptly in front of a pizza place. Corbett never watched where he was going in the skyway. He didn't have to. The crowd parted around him like pedestrian male privilege, or maybe tall person privilege, while he obliviously perused the lunch counter menu. "They've got Hawaiian barbecue pizza." She checked her watch and shook her head. "Strike's in twenty minutes. I don't have time." At this point, she'd barely be able to grab the gym bag from her office and get to Strike's building before class started. "Ah, come on, Ellie." Nora sighed. No one else called her that. Most people didn't even know her full name was Elnora. Ellie was too light, too easy on the tongue. Ellie was someone who changed her schedule around at the drop of a hat, who acquiesced to her friend's cajoling. "They aren't holding any lunchtime classes next week. I don't want to miss this one." She'd reached the top of the waitlist for the exclusive gym six months ago, and since joining, Strike's kickboxing sessions had become an integral part of her week. It was the exact opposite of the mental challenges that filled her work days; Strike was visceral, a world distilled into sheer physical effort and power. It was also her only chance to see Logan. "Fine, fine." Corbett gave up. "I'll fend for myself." They moved back into the crowd and turned a corner past a six-story waterfall cascading into a pool at the bottom of an atrium. Just before crossing the final bridge to Parrish's building, Nora reached into her blazer pocket to grab a few folded bills. "You're not still giving her money." Nora didn't bother replying; they'd had this fight too many times. She checked for security guards as they crossed over the intersection, then grinned at the woman lumbering slowly next to the glass. "Hi, Rose." "Briefcase lady!" Rose, an elderly homeless woman, straightened up when she saw who'd stopped in front of her. Nora shook the older woman's hand, pressing the bills into her palm. "You busted that heart out of your briefcase yet?" Rose asked the same urgent question of every passerby on the skyway, until she got locked out of Parrish's building and headed to the shelter at night. The same went for purses, laptops, and backpacks; Rose was on a mission to liberate all the hearts in downtown Minneapolis. The building's security left her to it as long as she didn't panhandle, which was why Nora made sure to be discreet. "Any day now, Rose." Nora touched her arm, winked, and kept walking, while Corbett scrolled through his email at her side. "She's a lush." "Said the Irishman." "Doesn't take Irish eyes to see that one keeps her heart in a bottle." Then Corbett stopped in his tracks, almost causing a collision with the person behind him, and cursed at his phone. "What is it?" Nora checked her watch again. She had less than fifteen minutes now. "I have to go." "We both do." He stalked to the elevator banks and shook his head. "Change of plans." Nora followed him into the elevator and checked her email to find a meeting request for a new client. There was no company name, but it was flagged as a white-glove prospect, which meant all available partners were required to attend. "In ten minutes? Are they joking?" "Apparently it's an emergency." "Whose emergency?" Before they could discuss it further the elevator doors opened to reveal a near frantic Rajesh, their newest partner in the firm. "Ah, thank God you're both back. Jim is already in the executive conference room and the client will be here any moment. Please." Rajesh waved them out of the elevator and bustled behind them down the hallway. "We'll have an hour. I'll do the introduction and then we'll hear what they need. Can you imagine if we took it? What an opportunity. They're famously private, closed door, not a single equity offering as far as my sources can tell." "Who is it?" Nora asked, but Rajesh had already doubled back toward reception to welcome the mystery company who'd just hijacked Corbett's lunch and prevented Nora from going to Strike today. She gritted her teeth as they stepped into the conference room where an admin was laying out settings of spotless china. "How did the seminars go?" Jim asked, leaning back in his chair at the head of the table. "Fine. The usual crop of new accountants." "Our bright future." Jim smiled. "I'm sure you both showed them the way." "We always do." Corbett sat down and pulled the tray of biscotti closer to him. The admin set a cup of steaming green tea in front of Nora along with a meeting agenda that made her spine straighten with a shock of excitement. Strike, Inc. She stared at the client name at the top of the paper and ran a quick hand over her hair, smoothing any loose strands back into the chignon. Despite all these months of attending classes, she'd never worked up the nerve to actually speak to Logan. Now an entire host of nerves flip-flopped under her skin. When Rajesh ushered their guest into the room, Nora closed her eyes and took a steadying breath, but the voice behind her wasn't the one she'd expected. The deep, crisp notes filling the air didn't belong to Logan Russo. Nora turned and saw a trim, handsome man in a full-vested suit. He shook Jim's hand with a measured intensity, and the silver sprinkled through his dark hair matched his watchband and tie, all combining to form one gleaming, deliberate package. It was a man she hadn't laid eyes on in months, who--in fact--she'd counted on never seeing again. When he pivoted to Nora, his smile didn't alter the slightest fraction, but the light in his eyes changed. He remembered her, too. As she struggled to understand what was happening, he offered her a perfectly groomed hand. "Gregg Abbott, Strike." Excerpted from Strike Me Down: A Novel by Mindy Mejia All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Library Journal Review

A forensic accountant and partner in a Minneapolis firm, Nora Trier always gets her thief. Then her firm is hired by Strike, a feminist, corporate-resistant athletic company owned by famed kickboxer Logan Russo, which is launching a kickboxing tournament meant to find a new face for the company. Now the hefty prize money has gone missing, but Nora is reluctant to get involved; she has secret ties to Strike that could compromise her integrity. From the author of Leave No Trace; with a 60,000-copy first printing and a five-city tour.

Publishers Weekly Review

The sometimes brutal, bloody world of kickboxing makes an effective and unusual backdrop for this superb thriller from Mejia (Leave No Trace). Strike, a large business dealing in athletic wear, gyms, and protein bars, is owned by marketing genius Gregg Abbott and his wife, Logan Russo, a legendary kickboxer. The couple are hosting an upcoming kickboxing tournament, Strike Down, with the winner set to earn $20 million and become the new face of Strike. With the tournament only a week away, the prize money disappears, and Gregg wants forensic accountant Nora Trier to find out where the money is stashed before the start of Strike Down. Gregg also has a suspect in mind--Logan, whom he suspects of trying to sabotage the tournament because she hates him and wants to get out of the business. Nora faces an ethical dilemma, since she has a personal connection to both Logan and Gregg. Mejia smoothly couples an intense look at three distinctive characters with a twisty, unpredictable plot. Along the way, she succeeds in making even accounting exciting. Agent: Stephanie Cabot, Gernert Co. (Apr.)

Booklist Review

Forensic accountant Nora Trier's renowned objectivity and uncanny skill at spotting fraud have fueled her rise to partner at Parrish Forensics. So, when Gregg Abbott, cofounder of a trendy kickboxing chain called Strike, hires Parrish to find $20 million in missing prize money for their media-hyped Strike Down tournament, Nora would seem the obvious choice for the emergency assignment. But she has a problem: the one-night stand she recently had with Gregg. Still, after being reassured by a Parrish colleague, Corbett, that Nora can handle the job, she starts digging into Strike's secrets. Gregg, she learns, is simmering with rage at his wife and Strike cofounder, Logan. The recent death of Logan's favored successor seems extremely suspicious, and Corbett may be involved in the intrigue. Mejia is on her game here, capably weaving deadly, breath-snatching suspense into the world of corporate chicanery. A good choice for Sara Paretsky fans.

Kirkus Book Review

A forensic accountant gets in over her head in Mejia's (Leave No Trace, 2018, etc.) latest psychological thriller. Nora Trier is very good at her job. She always gets her man (or woman) and never lets personal ties get in her way. It's why she took down a powerful CEO who was inflating profits. He was also one of her father's oldest friends. The case ended tragically and imploded her relationship with her family. However, it's that fierce independence and nose for justice that got her a job at the Minneapolis firm Parrish Forensics soon after the trial. Now, 15 years and 65 convictions later, Nora and her partners at Parrish have been retained by fitness giant Strike, Inc., owned by champion kickboxer Logan Russo and her husband, Gregg Abbott. In less than a week, they'll be hosting Strike Down, a massive kickboxing tournament where fighters will be competing for $20 million in prize money, and Logan will choose a new face for the company. The prize money is missing, though, and Gregg tells Nora he thinks Logan is sabotaging the company. Nora and her team must find and recover the money before the tournament ends. It complicates things that Nora herself is a Strike devotee and idolizes the magnetic Logan Russo, who inspires a cultish following. Nora also knows Gregg from a one-night stand several months earlier where full names weren't exchanged. Nevertheless, Nora starts digging into Strike's financials as well as Logan and Gregg's messy and complicated partnership and marriage. It soon becomes terrifyingly clear that this case isn't just a matter of money--it's life or death. Mejia's narrative crackles with obsession, greed, lust, and plenty of ambition, and it's loaded with more twists and turns than a spy novel. She obviously did her research into the visceral world of competitive kickboxing, and there's plenty of territory left to mine in the surprisingly interesting (at least the way Mejia writes it) world of forensic accounting. Readers will hope to see more of the unconventional Nora Trier. A compelling and breathless page-turner. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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