Re: Book Thread number ?
My recent reads
Trunk Music by Michael Connelly This Bosch novel finds Bosch back on his first murder case after his suspension and a working back period in burglary. This case finds a B movie producer stuffed in the trunk of his car with a bullet to the head. As Bosch investigates he finds out that this case is connected to the Mafia in Vegas where he runs into his old friend Eleanor Wish whose been released from jail. As is the norm for these novels Bosch ****es of the brass and the FBI but manages to solve the case.
Bunker Hill: A City, a Siege, a Revolution by Nathaniel Philbrick A good tale of the events leading up to Lexington and Concord, the Battle of Bunker (Breed’s) Hill and the subsequent siege and evacuation of Boston by the British. A lot of emphasis is placed on Dr. Joseph Warren’s involvement in the affairs and his death during the battle. But there is a nice timeline of events of the various events which lead to the first major engagement in the American Revolution.
Enemy of Mine by Brad Taylor This latest Pike Logan book by Taylor finds Logan and Jennifer attempting to break up a plot to assassinate a Middle East envoy. Problem with this plot is that there are two assassins, a Palestinian nicknamed the ghost and their old friend Lucas Kane. Non stop action from Tunisia to Lebanon, to Dubai to Qatar as they attempt to break up the plot and bring the former Navy Seal Kane to justice, good read.
The Midnight House by Alex Berenson This John Wells novel by Berenson finds Wells on the hunt for a serial killer. One by one the team members of a rendition house are being murdered. Who is doing this? Is it one of the detainees who was release Al Queda some other force? Wells goes to the Middle East and back trying to unravel the tangled web that this murder plot weaves. Good story. Not quite as much action as the past Wells’ novels.
Pride of Carthage by David Anthony Durham This book written similar to Jeff Shaara’s novels follows the journey’s and battles of Hannibal from Iberia to Rome and back to Carthage and his defeat by Scipio at Zama. It tells the story from the point of view of Hannibal, his brothers, some of the soldiers and camp followers and the various Romans who battled against him, a good read.
Drink with the Devil by Jack Higgins This Sean Dillon novel starts with a mysterious man named Martin Keough helping a Protestant Loyalist hijack a shipment of gold. Threatened with IRA gunman when escaping they dump the gold in the sea and retreat. Fast forward 10 years that Loyalist man is in prison in the US and the Mafia hears about the gold. Partnering with the IRA they help break him from prison to lead them to the gold. The problem Martin Keough is really former IRA gunmen Sean Dillon who now works for the British Prime Minister’s secret army as they try to take down the criminals and recover the gold.
The Legacy by Stephen Frey This book starts with Cole Egan getting notified at work that his father is dead and he needs to go to a safety deposit box to pick up his inheritance. When he goes to the box all it contains is a video tape when watching it he sees a video of another angle of the JFK assassination. This opens a can of worms as people are now trying to kill Egan to get the tape and the bodies start dropping. Okay read.
Supreme Justice by Philip Margolin This book brings back Brad Miller and Dana Cutler from Executive Justice. Miller is clerking for a Supreme Court Justice and an attempt is made on her life. It appears to be connected to a case pending review by the court that involves the CIA and a bunch of mysterious murders. Miller hires Cutler to investigate, once again plunging them into a nationwide conspiracy of mayhem and murder. Good read
Wild Bill Donovan by Douglas Waller This is a biography of OSS founder Wild Bill Donovan, a native of Buffalo NY he was a Republican politician who was tapped by FDR to run the Office of Strategic Services during WWII. This details the trials and tribulations what he had to go through to set up the OSS. The bureaucratic infighting with both the Department of Defense and the FBI. It details the great successes and failures and gives both the positives and negatives of Donovan. A good look at the founder of Central Intelligence in the US, though he never headed the CIA it is based on what he outlined to FDR and many of his protégé’s; Allen Dulles, William Casey, Bill Colby and others headed or played major roles in the CIA.