The Reading Bud

Book Blog by Heena Rathore-Pardeshi

Book Review: :05 Seconds to Die by Bob Brill

Read full book blurb

Filled with relentless action, sharp dialogue, and unexpected camaraderie, “5 Seconds to Die” is an adrenaline-fueled journey that explores the lengths two unlikely heroes will go to protect the world. The clock is ticking-are you ready to hold your breath until the final second?
“Bob Brill has truly crafted an international thriller that reads like a fast-paced movie. “5 Seconds to Die” is a rapidly moving, film noir-style story set in Hollywood. No matter what genre you love, you are in for the thrill (and the chase) of a lifetime in ” 05 Seconds to Die.”
-Edward Gusts Film Producer The Magpie film company
“Trust a radio reporter to know that seconds count — especially in this atmospheric noir featuring a PI, a moll, feds, and cartels galore.”
-Jonathan Handel Entertainment Reporter
Bob Brill is an award-winning author, writer, radio broadcaster, newsman and filmmaker. He’s written more than a dozen published books, made several short films, written two dozen screenplays, and produced a feature-length documentary.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

:05 Seconds to Die by Bob Brill is a fast, cheeky, old-school private-eye thriller with a modern cybercrime premise and the swagger of a Hollywood action caper. The novel follows Casey Order, a private investigator and former reporter whose life is thrown into chaos when fading actress Ginger Queen approaches him with information about a massive criminal plot involving Armenian mob boss Gerry Artimian, hacker Taco Miller, global crime syndicates, and an $80 billion cyber-heist targeting the Summer Games.

The book’s biggest strength is its voice. Author Casey narrates with a wisecracking, self-aware, noir-adjacent style that constantly nods to old detective fiction, classic Hollywood, spy thrillers, mob movies, and pulp adventure. The tone is deliberately broad and playful with car chases, burner phones, secret meetings, FBI contacts, mob bosses, assassins, hackers, international escapes, and sudden comic asides all sitting side by side. Author Brill clearly enjoys the genre, and that enjoyment gives the novel its energy.

Ginger Queen is one of the more memorable parts of the book. She begins as the glamorous, dangerous client figure, but gradually becomes more than a femme-fatale device. Her faded Hollywood past, vulnerability, courage, and sharp survival instincts give the story an emotional centre beneath the escalating cyber-conspiracy. Casey and Ginger’s dynamic is flirtatious, messy, funny, and occasionally surprisingly tender, especially as the plot moves from Los Angeles to Europe and back.

The thriller plot is intentionally big, almost cinematic in its scale. Artimian’s criminal coalition brings together multiple gangs, hackers, mobsters, and international players, while the stolen flash drive becomes the key to preventing a catastrophic attack. The final stretch, where Rigo and the cyber team race against time and stop the plot with only five seconds left, is wonderfully over-the-top in the best action-thriller tradition.

That said, the novel is not a subtle read. The humour can be brash, the dialogue occasionally exaggerated, and some character descriptions and cultural shorthand may feel dated or blunt to contemporary readers. The pacing is also very episodic, with the story moving from one set-piece to another at high speed. Readers looking for a tightly realistic techno-thriller may find the tone too pulpy, but readers who enjoy action-heavy, wisecracking crime fiction will likely have fun with it.

Overall, :05 Seconds to Die is an entertaining, fast-moving cyber-noir caper that blends private-eye fiction, Hollywood satire, mob thriller, international chase, and digital-age conspiracy. It is loud, funny, chaotic, and proudly cinematic, basically the kind of book that reads as if it already has one eye on the screen.


You can also read this review at:

Goodreads


Amazon


I love reading your comments, so please go ahead…

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

I’m Heena

Welcome to The Reading Bud, my cosy corner of the internet dedicated to all things books and authors. Here, I invite you to join me on a journey of discovering under-represented books, independent and small press authors, and all things book with a touch of love and loud purrs. Let’s get Reading!

July 2026
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Reading is like breathing to me.

Recent Posts

  • Book Review: Inferno

      Author: Dan Brown Release Date: May 14, 2013 Series: Robert Langdon #4 Genre: Mystery, Fact fiction, Conspiracy fiction, Thriller Pages: 528 ISBN NO.: 978-0-385-53785-8 Publisher: Random House Publishing Preceded By: The Lost Symbol

  • Book Review: The Other Side Of Midnight

    Sidney Sheldon Author: Sidney Sheldon Release Date: 1973 Genre: Thriller | Mystery | Romance Pages: 462 ISBN NO.: 0-446-35740-5 Publisher: Warner Books Followed By: Memories Of Midnight

  • Book Review: The Body In The Library (Miss Marple #3)

    Author: Agatha Christie Release Date: February 194 Series: Miss Marple Genre: Mystery Pages: 272 ISBN NO.: 978-0-00-729321-6 Publisher: Harper Collins Preceded by: The Thirteen problems (Miss Marple #2) Followed by: The Moving Finger (Miss Marple #4) Blurb When…

  • Earth Day

    I checked out fb in the morning and realised that yesterday was Earth Day. I want to confess that I really didn’t know that it was this month. Well, now that I know when it was,…

  • The Deutsch Affair: Beginning

    Well first off lets be very clear that this post is about The German Language. I’ve done my schooling from St. Mary’s Convent Sr. Sec. School (till 10th grade) and Air Force School (11th and 12th…