by Guy Walters ‧ RELEASE DATE: Aug. 2, 2005
Lack of imagination dooms a potentially fascinating subject, in a disappointing first from British journalist Walters.
Debut thriller, mining the history of the British Free Corps, a regiment of English soldiers that fought for Hitler, stars a British secret agent who turns traitor to save his wife.
Captured while fighting with partisans in Crete, John Lockhart is offered a deal: if he spies on his former comrades, the life of his wife Anna, prisoner in a concentration camp, will be secure. He agrees, intending to feed the Nazis false information, but only succeeds in getting his Cretan band of fighters killed. A series of fishy career decisions follows. Time and again, Lockhart elects to serve the Germans, excusing himself by deciding he’ll be better able to spy on them. Or perhaps it’s to protect his wife. Or perhaps (the reader may be excused for thinking) it’s because he will be shot otherwise. The story is largely taken up by Lockhart’s agonizing over these decisions, which culminate in his accepting the command of the British Free Corps, with the rank of Hauptsturmführer. Along the way, he learns that the Germans are manufacturing nerve gas, which they plan to use in rockets aimed at London. With the help of Leni, a Nazi hooker with a heart of gold, he foils that plan. He remains, though, sadly ineffectual. Information is obtained mainly by dumb luck. Lockhart’s spycraft reaches the dizzying heights of advising that a creaky door will make less noise if it’s shut rapidly. The narrative cuts away periodically to the present day, where John’s daughter Amy is excavating her father’s past, seeking to prove that he isn’t really a traitor. In these sections, as in Lockhart’s musings about his wife, the sentimentality reaches fever pitch while the action grinds to a halt. It also cuts away to Anna in her camp, and to the past of one of the British fascists, piling on the pages without adding much interest.
Lack of imagination dooms a potentially fascinating subject, in a disappointing first from British journalist Walters.Pub Date: Aug. 2, 2005
ISBN: 0-7432-7015-0
Page Count: 512
Publisher: N/A
Review Posted Online: June 24, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2005
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by Sean Parnell ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 3, 2019
A well-written and well-researched page-turner.
An elite American soldier who is out for vengeance uncovers a menacing terrorist plot.
Retired U.S. Army captain and combat veteran Parnell (Man of War, 2018) delivers the second installment of the adventures of special operative Eric Steele. On the mend from a showdown with a rogue agent, Steele is preparing for a quiet dinner at home with his mother. The wine is quickly forgotten and the steaks start burning when Russian assailants bring the war to his doorstep. Using RPGs, C-4 explosives, and a SAW machine gun, the Russians are after a mysterious package sent from someone deeply connected to Steele’s past. Steele narrowly escapes the attack with his life, but his mother ends up in intensive care. Shoulders heavy with guilt, Steele must use his connections and skills as an Alpha—an elite operator who answers only to the president—to find those responsible for the attack. Pumped up with prescription steroids and with his “keeper” and close friend, Demo, at his side, he takes off for Europe to follow the only clue offered by a former president, who cryptically refers to some off-the-books operation called Cold Storage. The mission becomes increasingly complex, dangerous, and engaging once Steele learns that the attack on his home is tied to assassination plans for some of the world’s most prominent leaders.
A well-written and well-researched page-turner.Pub Date: Sept. 3, 2019
ISBN: 978-0-06-266881-3
Page Count: 416
Publisher: Morrow/HarperCollins
Review Posted Online: Aug. 18, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2019
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More by Sean Parnell
BOOK REVIEW
by Sean Parnell & John Bruning
by Luca Veste ‧ RELEASE DATE: Feb. 5, 2019
A solid sense of place, a looming sense of menace: a frequently gripping read.
Veste’s moody procedural tells the story of a pair of Liverpool detectives tracking a killer influenced by local mythology.
Louise Henderson, the investigator at the heart of this novel, is a detective with secrets. She keeps some from her partner, DS Shipley; when the book opens, she’s also grappling with moments of sudden and inexplicable terror that leave her unsure of their origin and unsettled by their impact on her. Soon, the detectives take up the case of a woman who escaped a deadly attack—and who believes it was the work of the title character, a local legend who may be a murderer, a supernatural creature, or something else entirely. Not long after that, a dead body shows up, which suggests a connection to an earlier death, but a host of loose ends hang for the detectives to piece together—and there’s also the matter of a series of flashbacks set years earlier, when a teenager vanished. How these seemingly disparate elements connect—sometimes linearly, sometimes via well-made twists—leads the novel to its conclusion. Veste’s slow-burning approach works well, sustaining the sense of general wrongness that gives the narrative so much atmosphere. There are a few heavy-handed moments here and there. “They thought they knew evil. They had no idea” is perhaps the most flagrant example; as this book is either about a serial killer or an urban legend come to life, that sense of menace is already built in to the narrative well enough. But the conclusion is largely satisfying, playing well off the dynamics Veste established over the course of the story.
A solid sense of place, a looming sense of menace: a frequently gripping read.Pub Date: Feb. 5, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-4926-7129-9
Page Count: 416
Publisher: Sourcebooks Landmark
Review Posted Online: Nov. 12, 2018
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2018
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