I started rereading this series in 2021 and this is one of the better novels in the first eighty. The existence of Remo Williams is published in the National Enquirer with a lot of accurate facts, although there is no mention of CURE. Upon seeing the cover story, Harold Smith, Director of CURE, suffers a heart attack. The following chapter shows Remo waking up on death row in a Florida prison, having apparently just been transferred there from New Jersey where he’s told he has spent the last twenty years on death row. His own memory is fuzzy, and when, over the next several chapters, he has small pieces of memory and dreams—they don’t quite match the history we know.
How Remo got on death row is the mystery at the heart of the story. Chiun has returned to Sinanju. And Harold Smith, we discover, is in a coma which the new director of CURE wants to make certain he never recovers from. This is an exciting—read it in one sitting—novel that is great not because it recaptures Remo and Chiun at their best, but because it offers Remo in such an unusual light.