Format: 448 pages, Hardcover
Release Date: November 11, 2025
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Source: Publisher
Genre: Thriller / Suspense
When Walter Nash is recruited by the FBI to help bring down a global crime network his life is turned completely upside down in this thriller from #1 New York Times bestselling author David Baldacci.
Nash is an intelligent man, tough but fair-minded. He has a wife and a daughter and a very high-level position at Sybaritic Investments, where his innate skills and dogged tenacity have carried him to the top of the pyramid in his business career. Despite never going on grand adventures, and always working too many hours, he has a happy and upscale life with his family.
However, following his estranged Vietnam-veteran father’s funeral, Nash is unexpectedly approached by the FBI in the middle of the night. They have an important request: become their inside man to expose an enterprise that is laundering large sums of money through Sybaritic. At the top of this illegal operation is Victoria Steers, an international criminal mastermind that the FBI has been trying to bring down for years.
Nash has little choice but to accept the FBI’s demands and try to bring Steers and her partners to justice. But when Steers discovers that Nash is working with the FBI, she turns the tables on him in a way he never could have contemplated. And that forces Nash to take the ultimate step both to survive and to take his revenge: He must become the exact opposite of who he has always been.
And even that may not be enough.
Nash is an intelligent man, tough but fair-minded. He has a wife and a daughter and a very high-level position at Sybaritic Investments, where his innate skills and dogged tenacity have carried him to the top of the pyramid in his business career. Despite never going on grand adventures, and always working too many hours, he has a happy and upscale life with his family.
However, following his estranged Vietnam-veteran father’s funeral, Nash is unexpectedly approached by the FBI in the middle of the night. They have an important request: become their inside man to expose an enterprise that is laundering large sums of money through Sybaritic. At the top of this illegal operation is Victoria Steers, an international criminal mastermind that the FBI has been trying to bring down for years.
Nash has little choice but to accept the FBI’s demands and try to bring Steers and her partners to justice. But when Steers discovers that Nash is working with the FBI, she turns the tables on him in a way he never could have contemplated. And that forces Nash to take the ultimate step both to survive and to take his revenge: He must become the exact opposite of who he has always been.
And even that may not be enough.
Nash Falls is the first installment in author David Baldacci's Walter Nash series. With Nash Falls, Baldacci ventures into fresh territory: the cutthroat world of white-collar crime colliding with personal vendetta. At its core, Nash Falls is a story of transformation under duress, blending financial thriller elements with visceral action sequences. We meet Walter Nash not as a grizzled operative, but as an everyman success story: a brilliant, empathetic financier at the pinnacle of Sybaritic Investments, a powerhouse firm that's equal parts Wall Street glamour and hidden rot.
Married to Judith (cheater, oh sorry, spoiler!) and father to the spirited teen Maggie, who thinks she will become an overnight influencer, Nash's life is a testament to quiet ambition—long hours offset by family dinners and the occasional weekend hike. But tranquility shatters at his estranged Vietnam vet father's funeral, when midnight knocks from the FBI upend everything. The bureau's pitch? Infiltrate your own company as an unwitting asset in a sprawling money-laundering scheme tied to a global crime syndicate.
At the helm is Victoria Steers, a chillingly charismatic "criminal mastermind" who's evaded capture for years, her operations funneled through Sybaritic, like a venomous serpent coiled in the boardroom, with ties that lead back to powerful Chinese interests. What starts as a reluctant undercover gig spirals into a nightmare of betrayal, blackmail, and brutal reprisals. Nash, thrust into a web of corporate espionage and personal peril, must shed his civilized skin to strike back—evolving from ledger-balancer to something far more primal.
The plot zigs and zags with classic Baldacci flair: red herrings in quarterly reports, chases through rain-slicked urban alleys, and revelations that hit like gut punches. Yet, true to its series-starter status, the book builds toward a cliffhanger finale that's equal parts exhilarating and exasperating—resolving the immediate crisis while dangling threads for book two. Walter Nash is Baldacci's strongest creation here—a protagonist whose ordinariness makes his arc all the more compelling.
He's no super-spy; he's a guy who'd rather crunch numbers than crack skulls, with vulnerabilities that feel achingly real: the guilt over a distant father, the terror of endangering his family, and a quiet rage that simmers until it boils over. His evolution from buttoned-up exec to revenge-fueled avenger is the emotional engine, rendered with enough nuance to avoid clichés, though it occasionally strains credulity (more on that below). Supporting the lead is a rogues' gallery that shines in spots but falters in others.
Victoria Steers is a standout villain—ruthless, seductive, and intellectually matched to Nash —evoking a feminine echo of Baldacci's past antagonists, like those in the Atlee Pine series. She's not cartoonishly evil; her monologues on power and loyalty reveal a twisted philosophy that lingers. Then there's Shock (real name: Isaiah York), Nash's late father's battle-hardened comrade and a security savant. As the grizzled mentor figure, Shock injects heart and humor, his tough-love banter providing levity amid the darkness. Where the cast stumbles is in the periphery: Rhett Temple, Nash's sleazy boss and son of the firm founder, embodies every oily corporate trope, while secondary FBI agents blur into interchangeable suits who seem to be constantly chasing ghosts instead of actually indicting anyone.
This is a good start to the series. I was surprised that this book ended on a cliffhanger, but after everything Nash goes through in this book, we need to see how this all plays out.




