What do you think?
Rate this book


Meet Lawson. A cynical, wise-cracking vampire charged with protecting the Balance between vampires and humans, he is part cop, part spy, and part commando -- James Bond with fangs. Lawson mixes shrewd cunning with unmatched lethality to get his job done. He tries his best to dismantle conspiracies, dispatch bad guys, and live long enough to get home. In The Kensei, a battle-weary Lawson heads to Japan for a little rest and some advanced ninja training. But he no sooner steps off the plane than lands in the midst of a Yakuza turf war orchestrated by a shadowy figure known as the Kensei. With the help of Talya, a former KGB-assassin, Lawson must put a stop to the Kensei’s organ trafficking networks, prevent the creation of an army of vampire-human hybrids, and save his own skin in the process.
305 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 7, 2011
“I was told you fancied yourself as some type of comedian.”
“Who? Me? Nah. I’m just a sarcastic cynical prick. If that’s your idea of comedy, well, then I’m your man.”
Hell hath no fury like a professional assassin named Talya.
Talya slumped back. “Just would be nice.”
“What?”
She smiled. “Having kids with you.”
“Sure, we could have our family fun time. Sniper hour, close-quarter pillow fights, nighttime recon, we’d be the hallmark of a family utopia.”
The girl started screaming. The guy scrambled away. Both of them started shouting at the top of their lungs. Now I had a soundtrack as I worked.
The locals in Noda-shi get a kick out of all the foreigners that come to this sleepy little town. Before they found out the last true ninja was living a few doors down the only source of excitement was the Kikkoman soy sauce company located nearby.
I couldn’t recall the last time soy sauce got me excited.
She smirked. “You���re a slut.”
I grabbed my chest. “I prefer the term ‘manho.’”
“Took you long enough.” She smiled. “I had to wait in line and then I got propositioned three times.”
“What?”
She patted my thigh. “Relax, lover. They weren’t guys.”
I raised my eyebrows. “And you turned them down?”
I grabbed the rail.There's a nominal plot and a romantic interest, but the book seems to have been written largely to serve as a place setting for the author's love of martial arts and the Japanese culture and includes little else of interest. There's a market for that, I suppose, but that market isn't me. I could barely grit my teeth enough at the writing style to be able to flip through the pages 9 through 288.
A shot rang out.
Slanged off the railing near my hand.
I lost my hold.
Fell. [p. 126, no ISBN, advance uncorrected proofs]