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AGENT IN PLACE

Somehow, Greaney cranks out one winner after another. That’s a lot of work for the Gray Man and plenty of pleasure for...

Seventh in the high-powered Gray Man series (Gunmetal Gray, 2017, etc.).

The Islamic State group is about to execute Courtland Gentry—the Gray Man—and leave his body floating with others in a bloody lake. Then the story backs up a week to show how he got into this unholy mess. Gentry is ex-CIA, now an assassin for hire. He meets in Paris with Dr. Tarek Halaby, head of the Free Syria Exile Union, or what’s left of it. All the brave members are dead, Halaby says, and he jokes that perhaps Gentry would like to kill the Syrian president for him. “A mission into Syria,” they both agree, is “a fool’s errand.” Which naturally means he'll go there. Halaby hires him to rescue the model Bianca Medina from an imminent IS attack, part of a plan that Halaby hopes will "deal a serious blow to the Syrian regime and hasten the end" of the cruel civil war. A stunning beauty who’s protected by bodyguards in a Paris hotel, Medina is the lover of Ahmed al-Azzam, the brutal Syrian president and “most horrible man in the world"—and also, as she tells Halaby after Gentry brings her back to his safe house, she's secretly the mother of Jamal, Azzam's only son. Azzam’s wife, Shakira, aka “the First Lady of Hell,” knows about Bianca and wants her dead. (Thus the IS attack, which she manipulated.) Halaby isn't sure if Shakira knows about Jamal (she does), but he's sure she'll kill the boy if she does. Bianca is itching to return to Syria to be with Jamal, who's been left behind with a bodyguard, but Gentry, against his own better judgment, agrees to go get him. If there’s “one shot in hell” to snatch the child from the evil dad, “that shot was the Gray Man," a sharpshooter who will gladly kill Azzam if only he can get close enough. So, as anyone who follows the series knows, plenty of blood spills. Whether any of that blood is Assad's—oops, Azzam's—is for the reader to find out. Court Gentry claims to kill only for cash, yet he mostly nails just the bad guys—deep down, he has a moral code. Readers of the great Tom Clancy will salivate over this fast-moving and well-plotted yarn, which is part of a consistently appealing series in which each assignment is billed as the most dangerous ever.

Somehow, Greaney cranks out one winner after another. That’s a lot of work for the Gray Man and plenty of pleasure for thriller fans.

Pub Date: Feb. 20, 2018

ISBN: 978-0-451-48890-9

Page Count: 512

Publisher: Berkley

Review Posted Online: Dec. 11, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2018

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LIBERATION

We look forward to the movie.

During World War II, a scrappy Australian teenage runaway turns pampered bride, then Resistance agent and ruthless soldier in the French countryside.

“ ‘I’m sorry. I’m sorry I can’t be like those other wives. The thought of hurting you is awful but so is the thought of letting those bastards win….’ Nancy twisted in her seat and hitched up her skirt so she could sit astride him. ‘Henry Fiocca, I fucking love you.’ ” In the less successful of two novels this year inspired by the amply decorated, famously high-spirited World War II heroine Nancy Wake (the other is Ariel Lawhon’s Code Name Hélène), the character emerges as a feisty foremother of Lisbeth Salander. While Wake’s liberal use of profanity is a historical fact, documented in her own autobiography and elsewhere, here it is deployed with anachronistic abandon. “Vagina, vagina, vagina,” shouts Nancy in her interview for a position with the British Strategic Operations Executive. “It’s a scien-fucking-tific term!” The facts of Wake’s war participation, working with the Resistance troops in the Auvergne, are dramatized in high-stakes scenes of battle, ambush, and betrayal. As in life, Nancy kills one man with her bare hands and others with a gun; she completes an epic bike ride that saves the day. But some aspects of this character’s behavior—her treatment of a gay radio operator comrade in arms (at first close friends, she later accuses him of “sticking [his] cock in every hole [he] can find”); her participation in a fireside blood ritual with a Resistance leader; other unpleasant interactions with the soldiers of the Maquis—seem to strike the wrong note. The first collaboration by American screenwriter Darby Kealey and British historical fiction author Imogen Robertson under the pseudonym Imogen Kealy, this novel is already being adapted into a feature film for Anne Hathaway.

We look forward to the movie.

Pub Date: April 28, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-5387-3319-6

Page Count: 384

Publisher: Grand Central Publishing

Review Posted Online: Jan. 26, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2020

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RED STORM RISING

The author of the best-selling sub-chaser, The Hunt for Red October, launches a bigger confrontation: the USSR takes on NATO for a deadly bout of conventional warfare. Islamic extremists sabotage a major Siberian oil field, leaving the Soviet Union faced with years of fuel shortages. The hawkish Minister of Defense convinces the Politburo to take desperate action: Soviet forces will first neutralize NATO, then invade the Persian Gulf and seize control of its oil. To buy time for the troops to prepare, the Russians make a major arms-control initiative. But Bob Toland, an analyst for the National Security Agency, notices and reports unusual activity. Soon forces everywhere are on full alert. Teams of elite Red Army troops attack selected West German targets and a shooting war is on. A US base in Keflavik, Iceland, is shocked by a Soviet air and sea assault. The valuable post is lost, but not before a canny Air Force weatherman, Mike Edwards, and a small band of men escape and head for the barren Icelandic outback, where they radio reports of Soviet activity to satellite intelligence. The capture of Iceland not only cuts down on effective defense against subs, it also gives the Russians a handy launching spot for air raids on the convoys that are bringing supplies and soldiers across the Atlantic to Europe. Edward Morris, commander of the U.S.S. Pharris, defends the convoys and tracks shadowy subs until his ship is crippled. In Germany, tank battalions attack and counterattack. Skipper Dan McCafferty leads a pack of US subs deep into the Barents Sea, where they let loose a volley of missiles that hit bases within the Soviet Union itself. Finally, the Soviets, hard pressed, contemplate a "limited" nuclear attack, but several sane men manage to propel the crisis to a negotiated happy end. Clancy populates both armies with intelligent and likable men, arms them with astonishingly powerful weapons (for some, the virtuosity of these high-tech arms will be the book's greatest appeal), and succeeds in keeping the action crisp, absorbing The breadth of activity precludes the neat structure of suspense that distinguised Red October. But, still, an informative, readable, sometimes dazzling speculation on superpower war.

Pub Date: July 1, 1987

ISBN: 042510107X

Page Count: 637

Publisher: Putnam

Review Posted Online: Sept. 20, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 1986

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