This is the fourth book in the Micah Dalton series. Micah Dalton is a cleaner for the CIA, so his work takes him around the world throughout this book, as well as the others. I love these books.
The stories are great—lots of suspense and thrills, hand-to-hand fights, gun fights, car chases, explosions, conspiracies—pretty much everything that makes a wonderful story for me. Micah Dalton and the rest of the cast of characters are also engaging, well developed, defined, with just enough organic material to make them seem real and believable. I love the round-the-world travel, as well as the secrets and conspiracies. All of that is so far removed from my real life, stories like these are vicarious adventures for me.
In this book, Dalton is on his way to meet an old friend when things go bad. He notices immediately that he’s being tailed, which means the meet has been compromised. Abandoning the meet, he turns his attention to his watchers, trying to determine who they are and why they might be following him. Very shortly afterward, his friend is found tortured and murdered. Then Dalton becomes suspect number one. We follow Dalton across Europe as he works to figure out who killed his friend and why they worked so hard to put it on him.
One of my favorite things about Stone’s books is the writing. I love his complex sentences, the intelligent phrasing, and the sarcasm. And his dialogue is very good. Dialogue is a tricky thing, very difficult to get just right, at least that’s my opinion—as a reader and a writer. Dialogue can make or break a story for me. But Stone does it very well. I often laugh aloud while listening to these books (I listened to all four audiobooks—which are very well narrated, by the way). Stone’s dry, sometimes scathing, sarcasm has been a rare find for me, and something I thoroughly enjoy.
This book is not meant to be the end of the series. However, it was published in 2010, and no other books have come out since. I am very curious to know where the next book is, where David Stone might be, and why he hasn’t gotten the next book out. It would be very sad news if these four books were all we’ll see from this author.
If you like Jason Bourne, Jack Reacher, or anything in the spy/thriller category, you’d very likely enjoy these books. They can be quite graphic, which is good for the characters and settings, but sometimes the physical violence turns my stomach a bit. In scanning some of the other reviews, these books aren’t for everyone. But if you haven’t tried them, I would very much encourage you to do so. And you could always listen to the audio version; they are very well done.