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Book Review: The Killer Collective by Barry Eisler

The Killer Collective, by Barry Eisler

Thomas & Mercer, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-5039-0426-2

Available: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition, audiobook, MP3 CD

 

If you are looking for a good action story populated by ex-Special Forces people who destroy anyone and everything in their way, you’ve come to the right place.  Author Barry Eisler has already written two series of books, one starring ex-Green Beret/CIA spook John Rain, and the other focused on hard-nosed Seattle cop Livia Lone, who specializes in investigating brutal sex crimes. (think Law & Order: SVU)  This is the first time he has merged both characters into the same book.  Note: if you have never read any of the other books (as I have not) you can still read The Killer Collective as a stand-alone novel and understand the story.  However, there are frequent references to the plots of other novels in the series.  The author does throw in enough that you can get the general gist of how the characters know each other, but your overall understanding of the characters and why they act the way they do would probably be enhanced if you had read the other books.

The plot: Detective Livia Lone and two other investigators are busy tracking down the members of a online kiddie-porn ring, and find that six of its members also happen to be members of the U.S. Secret Service.  Naturally, the government won’t admit such a thing, so the FBI shuts down her investigation, and she quickly becomes a target of mercenary killers bent on eliminating anyone involved with the investigation.

Meanwhile, John Rain, now an assassin for hire, has his own set of problems with people who want him dead– people with a lot of money and a lot of firepower.  Through individuals known to both Lone and Rain, the separate plot threads tie together in the first third of the book.  The rest is about survival and making those who are responsible pay.  This review is simplifying the plot a bit, so as not to give away too much.  It’s actually a good deal more complex.

Each chapter is written from the point of view of one of the characters, and not just that of Lone or Rain: at least four other characters get a turn or two.  Even more unusual, all of them are written from the third person perspective except John Rain’s, which are written from the first person.  Surprisingly, it isn’t confusing, and really helps the story, as the characters, despite all being trained killers, are quite unique.  Carl Dox is one of the most memorable personalities, as he injects some needed humor and emotion, keeping the ‘collective’ members from being too similar.  The story itself is excellent, and rarely moves in a straight line: there are plenty of twists and turns.   There is a lot of intrigue, and it’s livened up because the members of Rain’s collective are not a group completely united behind a cause.   Some of them basically despise each other because they have been on opposite sides in previous special operations in other books.  Half the fun is seeing how they struggle to even tolerate each other, despite needing to work together to survive.  How do you work with someone you previously tried to kill?

The action itself is first rate– the author clearly knows his stuff.  This isn’t just your standard “shoot all bad guys in an insanely bloody firefight”  book, there is a lot of meticulous planning by the characters that goes into each action sequence.  No one just rushes in, guns blazing.  All the confrontations are planned out down to the tiniest detail by Rain and his cohorts, who don’t want to leave anything to chance.  Just setting up a meeting to talk to someone who can provide information requires a lot of work, in order to prevent coming out on the wrong end of a double-cross.   The reader will be amazed at the level of detail, and it all sounds like it came out of actual operations run by real-life special agents.  The author used to work for the CIA, and he’s clearly drawing on his background.  Pulling off the confrontations in this book and making them seem true to life would be tough for most authors, but Eisler does it with ease.  There was one time when the action got so detailed in terms of character movement that it did get a bit confusing, but that can be easily overlooked, since everything else was so well done.  For pure excitement that holds your interest, this is close to seamless.

If you like stories with a plot like the intertwined coils of a serpent and characters that are larger than life in terms of their ability, but still human in terms of their actions, this book should not be missed.  It should be in the fiction section of every library.  Highly recommended.

 

Contains:  violence, profanity

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson

 

Book Review: Inspection by Josh Malerman

Inspection by Josh Malerman

Del Rey, 2019

ISBN-13: 978-1524796990

Available: Hardcover, Kindle edition, audiobook

 

Hot on the heels of the biggest Netflix movie of all time, Bird Box, Josh Malerman is poised to continue his climb to stardom in this stellar new novel, a strange story that takes a left turn through the woods of Michigan instead of following a well-trodden road.

For anyone who has read him, Malerman a refreshing read because he eschews the normal, refusing  to follow formula: he entertains  readers. as well as forcing them to think. Bird Box, Malerman’s first novel, has been followed by Black Mad Wheel (music was the antagonist, allegedly), Goblin (a connected set of stories), and Unbury Carol (a western/horror/romance),

Inspection may remind some of 1984 or The Giver. The premise is that two towers exist in the forest, each just barely out of sight of the other. Within each, 26 students are raised from birth, given names of simply letters. The Alphabet Boys. The Letter Girls.  Neither is aware the other sex exists. The leaders of the experiment, D.A.D. and M.O.M., train their prodigies in several subjects, the arts, and more, honing the twelve-year-olds for mysterious lives.

The initial sections force the reader to push past the typical storytelling format, as the characters and setting require an intricate set up. Assigning each student only a letter for a name accomplishes both identity and sameness, the reason of which will reveal itself in layers. The schooling and activities impressed upon the students are mindbending and brutal: bizarre games and social events that twist in logic and morality.

J suspects something exists beyond the borders of his world when he sees a shadowy figure beyond a tree in the yard. It sends him on a journey that will alter him in ways he never thought possible, changing how he views his compartmentalized world. When a strange book lands on the students’ beds one day, one that reveals the truths about life outside of the school, the walls begin to crumble and terror of a new kind creeps into the students’ lives, one that could send them to “the corner,” a place from where no one has ever returned.

K embarks on a similar path, one that will bring her to a world she never knew existed.

Inspection will challenge readers. The result of Malerman’s story is a rewarding psychological journey that is guaranteed to garner him new readers and please his fans. His examination of the human condition, and of the “nature vs. nurture” debate, is relevant to the educational system and parenting today’s youth.

Finding a genre that fits this story will be a tough task, but one that should be determined by each reader. Inspection is destined to become one of the most talked about novels of 2019– and  it should be. Recommended.

 

Reviewed by Dave Simms

Book Review: Dracul by Dacre Stoker and J.D. Barker

Dracul by Dacre Stoker & J.D. Barker.

G.P. Putnam’s Sons. 2018

ISBN-13: 978-0735219342

Available: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition, audiobook, audio CD

 

There’s very little that can be added to the Dracula canon that would be deemed worthy of reading at this point, but when the great-grand-nephew of Bram Stoker pens a “prequel” to the original novel it’s worth making an exception. Dacre Stoker went deep into his research, discovering the many notes,  journals, and other documents in the family treasure trove, and emerged with an intriguing tale that is more a fictionalized “biography” of Bram than a true prequel.

Dracul chronicles the life of Bram Stoker, from a sickly young child to a man searching for the truth behind the mysteries in his life that laid the groundwork for his writing. Journals, letters, and narratives drive the novel, most notably those of Bram, his sister Matilda, and a man who is likely the inspiration for Van Helsing. Yet the true driving force in the book is Ellen Crone, the nanny who nursed young Bram back to health in mysterious fashion. Bram and his sister begin to notice odd things about the woman– until she suddenly disappears.

The search for her and the emergence of Dracul unfolds slowly, but in a manner that effectively builds tension, in a style similar to that of the original tale. The addition of J.D. Barker (author of The Fourth Monkey, a great thriller on his own), adds modern sensibilities to Dracul that help the pages turn more easily. Recommended for fans of classic horror fiction or any strong storytelling.

 

Reviewed by Dave Simms

Editor’s note: Dracul is a 2018 Stoker Award finalist in the category of Superior Achievement in a Novel.