John Gilstrap’s series of thrillers
about a private investigator who specializes in rescuing kidnap victims has
been on my TBR list for a while. The first book worked its way to the top a few
weeks ago, and it was just the escape from reality I needed. Unfolding mostly
in Virginia and Indiana, the two places I’ve called home the longest, the
high-octane story was satisfyingly low in angst and high in action.
No Mercy (Pinnacle, 2009)
opens with Jonathan Grave, loaded with high-tech surveillance equipment, on the
ground in a small rural community in central Indiana, preparing to extract a hostage,
a music student from Ball State University in Muncie, from his captives. The
maneuver goes sideways, and Grave kills the kidnappers to save the student. In
his rush to remove the student and himself from the scene, Grave leaves enough
evidence that the sheriff of the quiet town pieces together a credible picture
of what happened. She is determined that the rescuers, regardless of their
honorable intent, should go on trial for the murder of the kidnappers. We’ll
have no vigilantes in our town, thankyouverymuch.
Oblivious just yet to the knowledge
that law enforcement is looking for him and back in Virginia, Grave learns from
his ex-wife that her husband is missing and she wants Grave to find him. Grave
loathes his replacement and agrees reluctantly. Before he can organize his
resources and begin a search, she is savagely murdered and her home torn apart
in an obvious hunt for something. The Indiana police going all out to find him
and the Virginia police asking questions about just what he was doing while his
wife was being killed, Grave hides from them while tracking down his ex-wife’s assassins
and the missing husband.
Definitely a cut above the usual
action hero, Gilstrap’s protagonist is a real person with friends who try to
protect him and mixed feelings about what he does for a living. I liked him,
and I liked the momentum of the intense plot which is far from routine. Book 13
in the series due out next spring, and I have 11 more to get through before
then. Highly recommended to readers looking for a well-written and original
contemporary thriller.
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Mass Market Paperback : 464 pages
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ISBN-10 : 0786020873
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ISBN-13 : 978-0786020874
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Publisher : Pinnacle; Original Edition (July 1, 2009)
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Language: English
Aubrey Hamilton ©2020
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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