Florida private investigator Francis “Bud” Galden has a simple job: keep an eye on the elderly Korean man living in the bungalow next door and make sure nothing happens to him. It’s an easy job for a beach bum. But a trip to South Korea soon changes things. Galden finds himself in trouble with a sociopathic gangster hell-bent on uncertain ends, an ex-military elite on a mission of vengeance spurred on by his traumatized wife, a beautiful woman who hides her identity behind a slowly crumbling façade, and, perhaps most threatening of all, his own alcohol addled conscience’s attempt to grapple with hard decisions.
From Florida’s Gulf Coast to the cities and shores of the Korean peninsula, defections and kidnappings, escape attempts and explosions, assassinations and betrayals shake up Galden’s world and the world of those he loves. How he navigates the violence, mysteries, and seductions will determine whether he has an impact on the outcome or becomes nothing more than just a footnote to the affair.
Ray Stickle is the author of The Footnotes, Ruin's Entrance, and The Unseen Death. He graduated from Ohio State University with a degree in history. He lived and taught in South Korea for four years, returning to his home in Ohio in 2006 to finish a master's degree. He currently lives in Georgia with his wife and sons.
The story would make a great movie. The simultaneous plots occurring around the world made for suspense reminiscent of the kind seen in James Bond movies. A lot of moving pieces and players in the plot that eventually come together at the end of the story. Vivid details brought about by the author's style made me feel I was actually in these places. You're pretty much on the edge of your seat throughout. The characters and situations evoked much emotion and your constantly wondering how the plot is going to play out. In as much as this is fiction, the story nonetheless does justice in bringing awareness to real world humanitarian issues regarding north Korean atrocities involving the kidnapping of foreign citizens. To that end I firmly believe a movie is in order.
For me, a measure of a good a novel is the speed I read it. Some I never finish but Ray Stickle's "The Footnotes" broke all records. International locations for novels work well if the writer knows the country. The Korean setting here comes from someone who understands Korea on both sides of the DMZ. For me, this novel from a writer I'd never heard of, has it all - a unique style, a facinating setting, good dialogue, colour, action and suspense. A very good read.