I’m up to number 13 in this series and it’s hit its stride in both style and theme. The two main characters—Chiun, Master of Sinaju, the oldest and deadliest group of hired assassins, and his western pupil Remo, ex-policeman who was framed for murder, supposedly electrocuted, then erased from all databases—are the superheroic duo of the series, who don’t quite get along with each other or their patron “emperor” Dr. Harold Smith. The plot is all about a young girl with dirt on her father who has gone to the authorities with evidence of an illegal activity which has garnered her a contract on her head for which our (anti)heroes must protect her, leading to a series of attempted killings, etc. Nothing special there, although the body count in this book is handled quite loosely in comparison to a few of the others.
By this time in the series, however, the point was less about Chiun and Remo’s activities and more about whatever subject the authors chose to satirize. In this case, it was rock music, and more particularly, heavy metal. The young girl is a libertine who is focused on “balling” Maggot of the band Maggot and the Dead Meat Lice who appear on stage in white suits festoned with raw pieces of meat. I don’t know how old Murphy and Sapir were, but they (and their perceived audience for these books) were likely older, conservative men who didn’t care for that kind of music. At the same time, these books can also subversively undercut that “get off my lawn” attitude with some pointed barbs at the staid conservatism of the period.
It’s a fairly solid entry in the series, but not worth seeking out if you aren’t reading these as historical documentation of the period.