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RETURN OF THE JAGUAR

A gripping yarn for armchair adventurers.

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A Canadian lawyer gets drawn into Mexico’s contemporary revolutionary struggle in this thriller.

In 2001, Ted Sorenson’s life is one that’s full of “bad decisions,” including a “bad marriage.” He reluctantly visits a spa in the Mexican countryside, looking for a new lease on life. En route, he meets and falls for an American woman who identifies herself as Barbara Jones, a brokerage firm’s bookkeeper. But at the border, she tells customs officials that her name is Bailey. When readers next see her, she’s purchasing a Smith & Wesson .30-caliber pistol and hollow-point bullets in Tecate. It turns out that she has some unfinished business involving Capitán Hernandez, a sadistic Mexican army general who led the 1997 slaughter of 45 villagers in Acteal, where Bailey was working at the time. She survived the attack but not before enduring unspeakable abuses, harrowingly revealed as the book progresses. Soon after Ted agrees to help her, he’s arrested; after Bailey breaks him out of jail, she discovers that there’s an international warrant out for his capture. The action escalates, and later Bailey kills a gunman and saves the life of Subcomandante Marcos, leader of the revolutionary Zapatistas, “a legend in his own time.” She then tries to get Marcos, who was also at Acteal, to kill Hernandez. Cuddy’s posthumously published debut novel is based on the actual Acteal massacre, and other figures, such as Marcos and the Zapatistas, are also drawn from real life. However, it also has a propulsive, noirish quality, as it tells the story of a good man and a woman with a tortured past who draws him into extraordinary events that test his mettle. Cuddy’s descriptions of the landscape, village culture, and the Zapatistas’ militant crusade all feel authentic. By comparison, Hernandez’s posturing villainy seems a bit overly broad, but Cuddy does devise credible, hard-earned fates for each of his vivid characters.

A gripping yarn for armchair adventurers.

Pub Date: May 15, 2018

ISBN: 978-0-9958689-0-8

Page Count: 288

Publisher: Chester House Press

Review Posted Online: June 11, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2018

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WITHOUT SANCTION

A page-turner with the kind of small details that lend unquestionable authenticity.

A spy dealing with personal trauma is called back into action to stop the use of a dangerous chemical weapon.

A former Army helicopter pilot and FBI special agent, Bentley delivers his debut novel with the introduction of Defense Intelligence Agent Matt Drake. After an op in Syria went sideways and his best friend was maimed, Drake walked away carrying heavy emotional baggage. Haunted by those he couldn’t save and in self-imposed exile from his wife in order to protect her, Matt wants nothing to do with his old life at the Defense Intelligence Agency. But when he's brought back under duress to help stop terrorists from using an untraceable chemical weapon against Americans, Drake feels a lurking sense of obligation, and before he knows it he's back on duty. The seeming purity of Drake’s call to serve is contrasted with the petty political infighting within the highest reaches of government. A chief of staff for the president is angling to jam a CIA director who has political ambitions of her own, and Drake’s mission falls right in the middle of this elaborate political scheme. While the flow of the story seems most natural during the shoot'em-up action scenes, this is a novel with an emotional core, and that may be what makes it stand out from other thrillers of a similar ilk.

A page-turner with the kind of small details that lend unquestionable authenticity.

Pub Date: March 3, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-9848-0511-9

Page Count: 384

Publisher: Berkley

Review Posted Online: Dec. 22, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2020

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DRAGONFLY

Complex, epic, and rich in historical detail—an uplifting story of finding friendship behind enemy lines.

During World War II, five Americans head to Nazi-occupied France on a secret mission for the OSS, but only four return.

Twenty years later, OSS case officer Alistair Renault finds a clue in a history book that the missing member of their group might have survived after all. He flashes back to the beginning of the operation, when he first assembled the team he dubbed “Dragonfly”—three men and two women who were chosen for their special skills and secret connection to the war. The five recruits bond in training, but once on their mission, they split up to avoid being caught by the enemy and communicate by making marks on a mural painted on the courtyard wall of a convent. Their cover stories offer surprising glimpses of daily life for the French and their German occupiers. (And a character list at the beginning of the book helps keep their real names and aliases straight.) Christoph Brandt, a track-and-field coach who couldn’t be drafted to the American military due to his missing thumb, learns firsthand how the Hitler Youth are taught to bully. He ingratiates himself with the Nazis by tutoring the son of the head of the Abwehr German intelligence agency in France. But the Nazis won’t be fooled for long. Civil engineer Samuel “Bucky” Barton risks being discovered by Christoph’s old friend from his hometown who betrayed his country to join the Third Reich. Working side by side with the enemy, the Americans are surprised to learn that some of the Nazis are not what they seem. Tired, disillusioned, and looking for redemption, they blur the line between friend and foe, giving Dragonfly both a way into the organization and a way out of the war.

Complex, epic, and rich in historical detail—an uplifting story of finding friendship behind enemy lines.

Pub Date: July 9, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-53873222-9

Page Count: 576

Publisher: Grand Central Publishing

Review Posted Online: April 13, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2019

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