Quarry cover

Quarry

Blake Brier • Book 8

by L.T. Ryan, Gregory Scott

4.50 Goodreads
(2.4K ratings)

Why You'll Love This

When a predator becomes the prey, every alliance and every motive in Blake Brier's world becomes suspect.

  • Great if you want: a tight thriller where hunter-versus-hunted dynamics constantly reverse
  • The experience: fast, pressurized, with short chapters that demand one more page
  • The writing: Ryan and Scott keep tension coiled through spare, punchy prose and sharp misdirection
  • Skip if: you haven't read earlier Blake Brier books — context matters here

About This Book

Blake Brier has built a career out of finding people who don't want to be found — but in Quarry, the eighth installment in this gripping series, the lines between hunter and hunted blur in ways that put everything he values at risk. The tension isn't just external; it's the kind that lives under the skin, in the choices a man makes when the rules stop applying and survival becomes the only language anyone speaks. Ryan and Scott keep the stakes personal, which is what makes the danger feel real.

What distinguishes Quarry as a reading experience is its pacing — tight without feeling rushed, allowing character moments to breathe inside a plot that rarely lets up. The co-authors have developed a clean, purposeful prose style that trusts readers to feel the weight of a scene rather than spelling it out. By book eight, Blake Brier is a fully realized presence on the page, and that depth pays dividends here. This is a thriller that earns its momentum through craft rather than chaos.