Hideout: An Alice Vega Novel
Hideout: An Alice Vega Novel book cover

Hideout: An Alice Vega Novel

Hardcover – March 8, 2022

Price
$19.22
Format
Hardcover
Pages
368
Publisher
Doubleday
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0385545532
Dimensions
6.43 x 1.32 x 9.55 inches
Weight
1.63 pounds

Description

EDGAR AWARD NOMINEE “Luna takes the usual private eye tropes and imbues them with added resonance. Vega is an excellent investigator who doesn’t bounce back right away from physical harm, and her relationship with Cap earns its complexity. I know I’ll be reading more of this series, and you should, too.” –Sarah Weinman, The New York Times Book Review “Exhilarating. . .Vega’s PI partner, Max Caplan, lends support, but it is the no-nonsense Vega who carries the day. Readers will want to see a lot more of this kick-butt hero.” – Publishers Weekly “Vega. . . returns with a fury that singes the corners off the pages. This is the third Alice Vega novel (after The Janes , 2020), and they just keep getting better, thanks to brilliant characterizations and lots of surprises. Jack Reacher fans will adore her. The vengeful Alice is as intriguing as the bride in Kill Bill . Viva la Vega!” –Booklist starred review The third novel in the Alice Vega series is another thrilling ride from the very start to the end. . .Fans will eat this book up. –Red Carpet Crash “After two well-received outings (e.g., The Janes ), Alice Vega returns to demonstrate her talent for uncovering seemingly unrecoverable truths.” —Library Journal LOUISA LUNA is the author of the Alice Vega novels The Janes and Two Girls Down as well as Brave New Girl and Crooked . She was born and raised in San Francisco and lives in Brooklyn, New York, with her husband and daughter. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1Zeb Williams kicked the turf with the tip of his cleat and thought about what was underneath. The field used to be real green, but the school switched it to the Brillo Pad when Zeb got to UC Berkeley in ’81. He thought that was lousy, since he’d mostly learned the game on grass. But he also had experience with dirt, mud, pavement. He’d gone down on a lot of sidewalks growing up, face smashed into the curb. The Italians would make fun of his bruises but shut right up when they saw how good he was with a ball. Soccer wasn’t his thing; basketball sometimes, but what he was really good at was any game when he had to throw and catch. He started playing football at Riordan in the city when the coaches discovered he could also kick. Even cross-xadcountry his freshman year. On top of the rest, it turned out he could run, too.He took a deep breath in through his nose and wished the field was natural so he could smell it a little bit. Right then it would’ve made him feel like he was in the right place, about to kick an extra point.“You ready, Two?” said Bear Thomas, the holder, jogging in place while the last seconds of the time-xadout ticked.The joke on Bear was always “Hey, Bear, what would you do if your mama named you Bruin?” Or “Duck,” or “Trojan.” And then, when they really wanted to piss him off: “She should’ve named you Cardinal after all.”Now, though, no one was joking, and Bear was jacked up; Zeb watched him hit his palm against the side of his helmet, still dancing around in his spot.Zeb raised his head about an inch but cast his eyes up higher, toward the stands, and suddenly he could hear all the people. Sixty-xadfive thousand, they told him. That’s what they were expecting. It always surprised him, the sound that that many people made. Most of the time, it was one continuous noise that hushed and rose to a shriek, over and over, like a fighter jet flying back and forth.Carmen was up there somewhere. She seemed too refined for cheering. Although, since they started dating, she’d told him it was hard for her to watch the games because she got so nervous about the outcome. Apparently, she’d never cared that much before.He smiled behind his face mask, thinking about her. He liked her because she was so honest. Other girls only talked about what they thought he wanted to hear: game stats; odds; recruiting news. Or they’d do their best not to care less, too preoccupied by modern dance or politics or whatever they studied. It would not have occurred to Carmen to pretend to be cool. She would be just fine in life.Which brought him back: what was underneath the turf? He’d heard it was a thin layer of rubber below the Brillo. Below that, gravel. Below that, concrete. Below that, dirt. Below that, below thatxa0.xa0.xa0.The time-xadout was done. Bear clapped his hands once.“Go,” he said to Zeb, then squatted, waiting for the snap.Zeb nodded, glancing up at the board. 6–xad6. 4th quarter. 7 seconds. The Stanford kicker was already in the doghouse for missing his extra point, all the love from the fans dried up the second the ball sailed just past the left goalpost. Could be me, thought Zeb. Could be any of us at any time.He shook out his hands and his feet and then kept a little bend in his knees, left foot in front of the right, torso leaning forward.Buck Reinhart snapped the ball, and Bear caught it, set it upright, and held his right arm out like he always did, like he was balancing the ball with the power of his mind.Zeb waited. On the clock it took less than a second, but time on the field was different. Sometimes he felt like it might be a new year out in the world by the time the game was finally over.He stepped forward—xadleft, right, left—xadbut instead of kicking with his right, he leaned down all the way and grabbed the ball with one hand, gave Bear a shove with the other. Bear tumbled to the ground in shock.Zeb looked down at the ball tucked nice and snug in his forearm, then back up at the clock. 4 seconds now. He didn’t have much time at all.He turned around and started to run, headed for Stanford’s end zone.He heard Bear yelling as he chased him; Bear had been a corner in high school, too, so he was fast, but not as fast as Zeb. He could see the Cal defense coming for him off the sidelines: Jimmy Moffat the tackle, Roger Swain the outside linebacker, flags falling at their feet. If they caught him they’d crush him—xadhitting the turf wasn’t like hitting the grass. It would be Jasper Alley in the city all over again, with the Italians piled on top of him, all of them giddy with the game, laughing away how much it hurt.His teammates weren’t laughing. They were screaming his name, at first Roger Swain shouting, “Wrong way, Two, wrong way!” It had happened before, players getting disoriented after a sack and charging for the wrong end of the field, but when Zeb didn’t stop or slow down, Roger and the rest seemed to realize this wasn’t a mistake.The sound from the crowd had taken on a sky-xadhigh pitch—xadto Zeb they sounded like the spaceship’s laser from War of the Worlds when it fried up the priest. Only louder.Thirty, twenty, ten.Some of the Stanford band and cheerleaders stood scattered in the end zone, confused, sipping cans of beer, tossing pom-xadpoms into the air carelessly.Zeb spotted a narrow route between a cheerleader and a guy holding a trombone and accelerated, lighter with each step. That was one thing he could say for the turf—xadit didn’t cling to the cleats like grass and dirt did, gave him a spring when he landed on the balls of his feet.He barreled into the end zone, the screech of the crowd higher and louder than before, the refs’ whistles shrieking. People began to jump down from the stands onto the field, dropping over the wall.Zeb threw the ball backward over his shoulder, knowing it would be impossible for his teammates to resist catching it, like bridesmaids with a bouquet, even though the game was over now.He pumped his arms, free of the ball, heading for the passage he’d scoped out, but then the trombone player moved, the hand slide sticking right into Zeb’s path.Zeb crashed into the musician’s shoulder and knocked the instrument out of his hand but kept heading for the exit. He caught a whiff of a cheerleader’s hairspray—xadstrong, like rubbing alcohol. He heard the clash of his teammates against the band and the cheerleaders, the thumps of them hitting the ground. He didn’t look back but imagined them all tangled, some laughing, others peeling themselves off the turf to keep up the chase.Into the corridor, and instead of making a right to the locker room, he ran straight into the parking lot and slowed down for a few seconds to hop on one foot and then the other, pulling off his cleats and tossing them to the ground. He stripped off his jersey and threw it up in the air as he gained speed, heading for the edge of the lot, still hearing the collective shriek of the crowd. He thought about running to Piedmont Avenue, where he might be able to blend in with the kids, or running a little farther, to Carmen’s sorority, to wait for her. He thought about running all the way to the interstate, figured it was about three miles. He thought about running across the Bay Bridge to the city, back to Jasper Alley, where he grew up, and maybe when he got there he’d get to see all the kids he grew up with, and maybe they wouldn’t have changed at all, still ten or eleven or twelve years old, still cracking crude jokes and chugging Coke from the bottle, wrapping their old footballs with masking tape to stop the air leaks. Maybe they’d be right on the corner where he left them, and when he finally made it there, they’d see him running toward them and say, “Where ya been, Zeb?” Read more

Features & Highlights

  • In this powerful new thriller, Alice Vega and Max Caplan return, uncovering a network of white supremacists in their search for a long-lost counter-culture hero
  • .
  • "Alice Vega is sensational—I want to see lots more of her." —Lee Child, #1
  • New York Times
  • best-selling author
  • Alice Vega has made a career of finding the missing and vulnerable against a ticking clock, but she's never had a case like that of Zeb Williams, missing for thirty years. It was 1984, and the big Cal-Stanford football game was tied with seconds left on the clock. Zeb Williams grabbed the ball and ran the wrong way, through the marching band, off the field, and out of the stadium. He disappeared into legend, replete with Elvis-like sightings and a cult following. Zeb's cold trail leads Vega to southern Oregon, where she discovers an anxious community living under siege by a local hate group called the Liberty Boys. As Vega starts digging into the past, the mystery around Zeb's disappearance grows deeper, and the reach of the Liberty Boys grows more disturbing. Everyone has something to hide, and no one can cut to the truth like Alice Vega. But this time, her partner Max Caplan has his own problems at home, and the trouble Vega finds might be too much for her to handle. Louisa Luna understands suspense, tension, and character like only the best writers in crime fiction do—and she may well write the best interrogations in the genre.
  • Hideout
  • is pure adrenaline and Luna's most intimate thriller yet, a classic cold case wrapped in a timely confrontation with a terrifyingly real network of white supremacists and homegrown terrorists.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(126)
★★★★
25%
(105)
★★★
15%
(63)
★★
7%
(29)
23%
(96)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Great

Follow up to the previous Alice Vega novels. Great series
4 people found this helpful
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Read too soon.

My only complaint is that I read before the next Alice Vega mystery came out. Now I’ve got to wait.
2 people found this helpful
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Action packed!

I enjoyed this book! I was first enamored with Vega and Cap when I read Two Girls Down several years ago. This is the third installment in the series and I would recommend reading the series in order if at all possible. I must admit that while I did like this book a lot, it was my least favorite book in the series so far. One of the things that I love about the series is the dynamic between Vega and Cap and they just spent too much time apart in this book. It was still a very solid story that I found very entertaining.

Vega takes on a cold case looking for a missing college football player who ran out of the stadium during a crazy play never to be seen again. The case takes her to a small town and it doesn’t take long for Vega to be knee-deep in the corruption and white supremacy that plague the town. Vega was on her own for much of the book, although we do get to see what is going on in Cap’s life. It was really a shame that they were not working this case together as they did in the first two books because they work so well as a team and balance each other out well. Vega can be a bit reckless in the risks she takes but it sure makes for an exciting story.

This book was filled with excitement. Vega was really dealing with two cases since she did want to find the football player but couldn’t leave the white supremacy alone. There were times when I thought that the small town of Ilona was going to be too much for her. Vega and Cap do spend some time together in the book and I think that there was some real progress in their relationship so I am hopeful they will be back to being a team in the future.

I would recommend this book to others. I thought that it was an exciting read filled with a lot of action and a mystery that kept me guessing. I cannot wait to read more of Louisa Luna’s writing!

I received a digital review copy of this book from Doubleday Books via NetGalley.
2 people found this helpful
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Gritty mystery thriller!

If you're in the mood for a gritty private investigator mystery thriller read, give the Alice Vega novels a try. Hideout is the third book featuring Vega but can be read as a standalone. This time Alice is working a missing person cold case which ends up overlapping a case involving white nationalists.

I was pulled right into the story from the beginning. The tension plus the need to find out what happened 30 years ago, kept me turning pages. Alice Vega is relentless at finding the truth despite danger to herself. She's smart and can't be a bit too fearless. The author does a good job portraying the characters, including secondary ones. Hope there will be more Alice Vega novels in the future. I received an advance copy of this book. All opinions are my own.
1 people found this helpful
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Louisa Luna is an evolving talent and her Alice Vega series is engaging (minor SPOILERS)

“Hideout” is the third novel in Louisa Luna’s series about Alice Vega, a California private investigator who specializes in finding missing persons, typically children. Alice has a loose partnership with former police detective Max Caplan in the first two books (and Max has romantic interests in Alice while her feelings for him may not be as strong) but Caplan has a much smaller role in “Hideout”.

Alice is hired to investigate a cold case disappearance of college football player Zeb Williams who during a game in 1984 ran off the field with the ball and out of the stadium vanishing into thin air. Her investigation leads her to Oregon where Williams was last seen but very soon she is sidetracked taking on a local white nationalist group resulting in life threatening consequences for our plucky P.I. Caplan who works for an attorney as an investigator is at home while all this is going on. Rather than helping Alice, Cap is having issues with his teen daughter Nell and her new hobby of automobile ‘drifting’ competitions; I know, what?

Luna is a good story teller and the narrative moves along nicely for the most part. Sidelining Caplan and the drama with his daughter felt like a distraction and didn’t do anything to advance the plot. Making this book Alice-centric was fine but the missing person’s case of finding Zeb Williams became secondary to Alice’s very dangerous decision to tangle with the white nationalist gang. This isn’t the first time Vega’s judgement is questionable and she puts herself at considerable risk, but the savage beating she receives in “Hideout” and her later near strangulation in the woods at the hands of some Nazi make you wonder if she’s in the wrong business.

“Hideout” concludes with a few twists and the mystery of the vanishing football player is solved. For the romantically inclined, Cap and Vega declare themselves ‘boyfriend & girlfriend’ but their relationship is anything but conventional. Overall I enjoyed this novel and think Louisa Luna is an evolving talent; her next Alice Vega story will be on my ‘must read’ list.
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Wasn’t the best Alice Vega book

Love Luna’s Alice Vega books, but this wasn’t my favorite. The whole book focused on her, basically the only character, her co-conspirator was absent almost entirely. She mentioned him in cameos so infrequently, I can’t even remember his name.
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A great read

A great series from Luna. Loving the Vega woman
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Hard to put down!

A great story and Alice Vega is relentless and extremely tough.
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Another Alice Vega blockbuster

I never read crime or mystery fiction until I read my first Alice Vega (Louisa Luna) book. I couldn't put any of them down. They are fascinating because Alice is smart and the plots are intriguing. I waited impatiently for Hideout and it wasn't a disappointment. Now I have to wait impatiently for her next book.