Reviewed by Lesmond: 7 out of 10.
Recently I was blessed with a birthday gift from my tank loving mate Burton.
As I eagerly unwrapped the plain brown package, three very obviously military oriented books bristling with medals, soldiers and missiles stared at me daring me to read them.
The books:
- Mission Compromised (2002)
- The Jericho Sanction (2003)
- The Assassins (2005)
The Author:
Oliver North and his good mate Joe Musser. Oliver North is himself an ex-marine with many decorations won in battle. The stories are fictional but are drawn from his 22 years experience in the USMC.
Not professing to be the sharpest tool in the shed, I didn't realise that these three books were a trilogy. In fact, the only thing which designates them as such is their ranking emblazoned on the books spines like stars upon a generals' shoulders. From one star on the first to three on the third, everything about these books oozes military subterfuge. Hence it was by shear coincidence that I picked up and started with the first in the series.
As I removed the dust jacket and hefted the weight of the large armour-plated hardback I was eager to enter a world of war and explosive mayhem. Instead I was greeted by 4 pages of Military abbreviations. Now it is at this point you as the reader have two choices:
- Read all 4 pages and attempt to commit them to memory.
- Ignore them completely attempting to guess their meanings within the context of the story.
Having chosen the second option I was disappointed that the abbreviations covered the pages like shrapnel and their relentless attack on every page caused my eventual capitulation.
The books are more drama than action and much like the movies of the same genres, personal taste will dictate your choice.
With a very likable protagonist in US Marine Peter Newman and an equally unlikable antagonist in the ex KGB agent Dimitri Komulakov it doesn't take a military genius to detect the US patriotism that permeates every page. This will not be greeted with a loud 'OOH-RAH!' from all readers.
Overtly Christian at times, the story leaves the reader with no doubt as to the beliefs held by the author. Very biblically sound, even going as far as acknowledging which Bible version is quoted, a somewhat in-depth explanation of the basic tenets of christianity within the story seemed to me a little overboard. Good on Ollie for getting the Word out there though.
Let me finish with a few comments that I wholeheartedly agree with:
'A highly readable tale of courage, faith and international intrigue all set within the milieu of today's Middle east politics'
'A lot of this reads like today's headlines...'
and as one comment suggests...
'You do in fact wonder how much of this story is true.'
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