A former Air Force major offers a military thriller involving a colonel whose investigation into the brutal murder of a general reveals a conspiracy stemming from the Vietnam War and presents him with a serious moral dilemma. A first novel. Reprint.
Patrick A. Davis is the national and New York Times bestselling author of six previous novels: The Commander, A Slow Walk to Hell, A Long Day for Dying, The Colonel, The General, and The Passenger. He is a graduate of the United States Air Force Academy and the Army Command and General Staff College, and a former Air Force major who flew during the Gulf War. He helped plan and direct U-2 surveillance operations for Operation Desert Storm and flew eleven combat sorties. He is a former pilot with a major airline.
I feel a little like I've been riding in a car with faulty brakes, they keep being viciously applied and then suddenly released allowing the car to resume at high speed, only to have the brakes suddenly applied once again. The plot will be going along nicely, the writing suitably intricate, and then, bang, something stupid and I'm wondering, why am I listening to this?
Part of the problem comes from the nature of all conspiracy stories, true or otherwise: you have to suspend all rational belief as the number of people who are needed to control the conspiracy spirals totally out of control. The stock characters will be familiar to those of us who read these books. The three who finally unravel the case, against all odds, of course, are a poster for diversity: a Korean police lieutenant, an African-American (of lower rank, naturally, but extremely talented) and a good old American white boy lieutenant colonel with a square jaw who has a lovely wife and 2.5 children. The villains are straight out of central casting.
Rereading what I just wrote makes it sound like I didn't like the book. Not true. It's just a little too formulaic, but as this was one of Davis's earlier books, perhaps he became more fluent in later works. As with any in this genre, my expectations weren't high. I just wanted to be entertained. It was a good book to listen to while mowing.
The General kept me turning the pages pretty quickly. The suspense and the tension kept the plot exciting and fluid. The action, surprises, sub-plots, interesting characters, and a conspiracy made for a great thriller. The protagonist, Charlie Jension, had psychological depth and plausible motivations (unlike the cardboard characters in some thrillers). I liked the conclusion to the story because of its memorable unconventionality and quirkiness. Patrick A. Davis is an author I think I will read more of in the future, based on this excellent first novel.
I rate the audio novel the “General” by Patrick A Davis 5 of 5 stars. Starting out with the murder of a military General this book developed into a solid murder mystery. We follow the lead detective working to solve this crime as he goes thru plot twists and surprises. Several additional murders happen during the investigation clearly showing a cover-up of some big secret. The payload of the book is surprising and of a grand scale which explains the scope of the cover-up. Well worth reading and I do recommend this book. I will add Davis to my list of favorite authors.
3.5 stars. Conspiracy story about broken souls after the Vietnam war and the hanky-panky that went on. Upstanding young men of the 90's investigate old warriors after the torture-murder of a general who had unearthed bloody scandal that might derail normalizing relations with 'Nam. Engrossing mystery, fast paced, unlikely number of bodies piling up for "peace" time but maybe that was symbolic.
Pat was a squadron mate of mine back when we flew U-2s. As a result I was compelled to read all his work. This story is by far the best. A good exciting read. For anyone who has ever experienced Song Ton, Korea, Pat captures the culture perfectly.
One of the most exciting book I've ever read. This started my sudden fondness to Vietnam War, its history and culture. An ultimate page turner. Never let me put it down until the very last page.
Sex, violence, and race make a volatile blend in this acerbic mystery. Davis keeps the story hot-footing along with short, punchy dialogue scenes. Davis is weak on the psychology of characters, strong on military career politics and the seamy side of overseas base life.
I read about this other in a magazine and I read this book (his first). It was good. I'm retired Air Force and this author was an AF pilot. He captured my attention and has kept it through all of his books.
I read this book several years ago and remember being completely sucked into it... By now, the only thing i clearly recall is how the general was fileted with a sharp knife and a fishnet. That, and i really enjoyed the story. Definitely a book i want to find in my storage facility and re-read.
I really wanted to like this book as I love thrillers and I love military thrillers. It just doesn't rank up there with the really great ones. Granted, it was a first novel, but it just doesn't compare to W.E.B. Griffitn or Demille