Clyde Barr is a drifter, a mercenary with a heart, a mountain man and a
hunter. After sixteen years lending his muscle and expertise in
conflicts across Africa and beyond, taking care of the little guy,
fighting for the downtrodden and choosing sides in various third world
conflicts, Clyde is tired and feeling his age. Having recently been
released from a spell in a Mexican prison where he barely made it out
alive, he is back in his native Colorado, in the mountains he loves,
looking forward to retirement from conflict, and a quieter way of life,
when he receives a panic-stricken phone call from his beloved sister
Jen, pleading with him to "come and get her". He has no idea where Jen
is or who has abducted her, but since their shared and troubled
childhood, Clyde and his older sister Jen have had a particular bond.
Nothing will prevent him from rescuing her.
And so it begins.
Clyde's hunt for his sister is a roller-coaster of a ride through the
wilderness, and small towns of America. A violent, bloody, modern day
western of drug barons, hard men and hired guns. Throughout it all Clyde
is driven by one thing - the need to save his sister. By day he mows
down anyone who gets in his way, and at night he battles his demons,
haunted by the memories of past conflicts, the women and children he
failed to save, and the bloody bodies he left in his wake. Yet amid all
this chaos, and the smell of gun smoke, Clyde shows us his softer side
by finding the time to fall in love and rescue a damsel in distress,
along the way.
This is Erik Storey's debut novel. With this book
he shows us what master story teller he is, and the quality of his
writing sweeps the reader along and kept me up into the early hours. I
really enjoyed this book.
Thrillers are my usual genre of choice,
although I don't usually go for action packed thrillers like this one.
However, I really fell for Clyde Barr. He is Jack Reacher with a heart.
He makes silly mistakes, really daft ones where you find yourself
shaking your head in disbelief. He tries to do the right thing, he
really wants to heal the world, but somehow he has to kill a load of bad
men to make good things happen. This book is not for the faint hearted,
but if you like thrillers, especially action thrillers, and if you long
for the wild west where the lines between good and bad get a little
blurry at times, and if you like your heroes, scarred, tough, and at
times ruthless, and with a moral code all of their own, you will enjoy
Nothing Short of Dying, like I did.
The really great news is that
Nothing Short of Dying is the first book in the Clyde Barr series. The
bad news is we are going to have to wait for book two! If the second
Clyde Barr novel is anything like the first, it will be worth the wait,
and I plan to be first in the queue!
Thank you to newbooks/nudge,
the publisher Simon & Schuster UK, and the author Erik Storey for
my free copy of Nothing Short of Dying, in return for an honest review.
To all you book lovers out there: If you love reading books such as thrillers, psychological thrillers, crime novels, general fiction or whatever book takes your fancy - look no further! I will be sharing the books I have been reading on this blog over the weeks and months ahead, and hopefully some of these will spark your interest.
Friday, 16 September 2016
Sunday, 11 September 2016
The Eskimo Solution by Pascal Garnier
For a long time this book had me thoroughly confused, there were even times when I found excuses not to pick it up. But eventually after about 25% into the book I found I did not want to put it down!
A strange book about a man called Louis who writes a book about a man called Louis - confused? Well you should be! The first man called Louis even had a next door neighbor called Louis! Louis the author writes a book about Louis the serial killer, so really The Eskimo Effect is a book within a book.
It is dark, very very dark, and it is bleak. But it is also amusing, in a way that almost leaves you feeling guilty for being amused, I mean the man is a serial killer - what can possibly be amusing about that? And yet there are moments where you may not be laughing out loud, but moments where you find yourself smiling out loud.
Perhaps the saddest thing for me after reading this book was to realize that Pascal Garnier is no longer with us. This talented authors premature death in 2010 at the age of 60 years is a real loss, to his family, to France and to all of us who like a good story told well. The most fitting tribute I can pay Pascal Garnier is to read his back list of titles, and that is exactly what I intend to do.
Thank you to Netgalley, and Gallic Books for my free e-ARC of this book in return for an honest review. The Eskimo Solution by Pascal Garnier is published today 12th September 2016.
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