Eco-Armageddon is the goal of a far-reaching plan with the scope, vision and power to strike oil rigs around the globe. With unprecedented disaster looming, Mack Bolan begins the hunt to identify and stop the terror dealers behind the threat. A trail that starts in Brooklyn's underworld leads to black market underwater mines, the looting and sinking of a British destroyer carrying gold, and the purchase of Hercules transports in Miami. The long arm of the terrorist operation, brilliantly organized by a vengeance-hungry madman, is soon to be hijacked by the Russian mob. Adding rocket torpedoes to the punishing arsenal, the enemy is all but invincible, possessing the technology, the soldiers and the greed to kill millions and doom the world.
Don Pendleton was born in Little Rock, Arkansas, December 12, 1927 and died October 23, 1995 in Arizona.
He wrote mystery, action/adventure, science-fiction, crime fiction, suspense, short stories, nonfiction, and was a comic scriptwriter, poet, screenwriter, essayist, and metaphysical scholar. He published more than 125 books in his long career, and his books have been published in more than 25 foreign languages with close to two hundred million copies in print throughout the world.
After producing a number of science-fiction and mystery novels, Don launched in 1969 the phenomenal Mack Bolan: The Executioner, which quickly emerged as the original, definitive Action/Adventure series. His successful paperback books inspired a new particularly American literary genre during the early 1970's, and Don became known as "the father of action/adventure."
"Although The Executioner Series is far and away my most significant contribution to world literature, I still do not perceive myself as 'belonging' to any particular literary niche. I am simply a storyteller, an entertainer who hopes to enthrall with visions of the reader's own incipient greatness."
Don Pendleton's original Executioner Series are now in ebooks, published by Open Road Media. 37 of the original novels.
Oh lord. Testosterone Harlequin I choose you. For the first two chapters of this book I wondered what I had gotten myself into with this paperback challenge I set myself. I almost gave up on this one and tossed it but decided to just ignore the writing and power through. By the end I was engrossed and staying in my favorite reading spot WAYY too long for the comfort of my legs and backside.
Is this good? Not at all. Is it *exactly* what the tin says it is? Absolutely. This is pure action escapism and nothing more. It's one of those books you pick up at a truck stop because you know you're going to have some downtime at some point and you need *something* to read other than your phone screen. I picked it up after it was withdrawn from the paperback rack for purely nostalgic reasons. I was never a huge Mack Bolan fan, but I did have a few similar series that I adored (Endworld, CADS, and Doc Savage mostly). I call them similar not because of setting or genre but because of how they are written and how akin to tinned popcorn they are. They're not the fresh made popcorn of movie theaters, they are the popcorn of christmas gifts from distant relatives... but they still hit the spot when you're really just craving popcorn and nothing better is in the house.
Would I recommend it? Totally. If you know what you are getting into.
I could give a synopsis of the story but... really? They're all the same and if you've read one you've read them all: Mack finds a lead on some really bad guys who are trying to do something really bad. Mack then kills a bunch of people in brutal fashion with skills that no real human could hope to match. Throughout this the book spends pages dedicated to listing exactly what the weapons, gear, and clothing being worn by everyone is. There's likely a girl. She may doublecross Mack or sleep with Mack... or often both. There's this attempt to setup a sense of dread and danger but no reader buys that because we all know Mack can't be beat. Mack single-handedly (maybe he has a helper or two) dispatches the bad guys and saves the world. The end.