Ward Larsen has produced probably the best written novel of his career in the David Slaton saga titled ASSASSIN’S EDGE. It has an intensity to each scene, every chapter, ALL the way to the last page, something I’ve not seen before in thrillers, not in his previous books or any other authors in the genre. There has to be a higher superlative than superb.
It is a tale of revenge, of hate, a visceral hate, the kind that guts your soul and leaves a shell of a man, who is driven to exact a revenge of carnage proportions to meet his hellacious needs. In many ways it’s a psyop conducted by a psychopath against his deepest unsuspecting enemies. For a man who flew jets at a time of war, thousands of feet above the clouds, Ward Larsen has an intense understanding of human nature in ground events in the middle of a war and what motivates men active in this war zone. I love novels that focus on and examine human behavior, what is the driving force behind what people do. Ward Larsen delves into the thought and emotional processes of both the protagonist and antagonist and subsequent reactions. One has only to look at the Russians in Ukraine to understand this wartime rationale of the antagonist.
Larsen begins his tale with a set of seemingly unrelated vignettes - the kidnapping of the daughter of the former Mossad Director from the streets of Almaty, Kazakhstan. The breaking apart mid-flight of an American RC-135 on a routine spy mission conducting on the edge of Russian territory in the Arctic Circle that sends the aircraft into a spiral dive into Russian territory. A US destroyer on patrol in the Black Sea, not realizing its radar/sonar computer software has misaligned, finds itself in a collision with a transport vessel and sinks within an hour’s time. Seemingly unrelated events, yet they can be linked further along in this journey of intrigue.
Because of the location of the downed aircraft and its specialized top security equipment, the Deputy Director of the CIA’s Special Operations Group,Anna Sorensen, is called in,as the Agency has special contingency plans drawn up already for such a possibility in hostile territory. Paths intersect when Mossad notifies the White House that a new spy source, code name Lazarus, gave warning of a serious incident to occur with a US spying operation, and that this man’s handler, the daughter of retired Mossad Director Anton Bloch, was kidnapped from the street while going to a meet. Bloch goes to Sorensen to track down his retired former Mossad agent David Slaton for assistance. Slaton now lives in the great beyond of the Rockies and does occasional work as a freelancer for Sorensen. Learning of the downed spy plane, a warning by Lazarus who is the link to the kidnapped Mossad agent, Sorensen sends Bloch to Slaton and on to Alaska to do an investigation into the downed plane and recovery of the sensitive equipment.
Larsen relates the recovery of the specialized equipment, and the underwater work required to reacquire it. I found it uncanny that a man who spent his life in the clouds has such a keen understanding of what it is like, what it feels like, to lose your sense of balance and direction, where up is at and down when in total pitch black darkness. Many folks do not realize your cochlea and eyesight are tied together for balance and direction. Slaton discovers this the hard way in a precarious recovery operation. Description of life in a sub is accurate too- I’ve been in one. Larsen’s accuracy and attention to details sent a shudder up my spine with this chapter. He’s got the claustrophobia down pat.
Who is this mysterious Lazarus? A coincidence that a US destroyer finds itself sabotaged and sinking beneath the waves of the Black Sea on the same day that a US spy plane spirals into the Arctic Ocean? And the link keeps returning to Lazarus. And what does his name imply? Slaton sets off to Israel for answers.
Little by little, Larsen reveals bits and pieces of Lazarus’s past and the motivator for the carnage he leaves behind, all tied through time to a Mossad operation that went wrong. Larsen exposes you to the innate evil found in man, especially those who cater to mercenaries. Give thought to Wagner and the Russians in the Ukraine when reading this segment. The story becomes a cat and mouse game. Who is the hunter, who is the hunted? The pieces finally fall into place connecting all the events, all the parties involved, of why people lived and people died. And it makes it self explanatory of why David Slaton resides where he does.
ASSASSIN’s EDGE may well prove to be the best written novel of Ward Larsen’s career. He is at the top of his game. The attention to details, building the danger, tension, the intensity of relating the story, all build to a stunning ending. I don’t think Thor’s Harvath or Flynn/Mills’ Rapp ever gave thought to doing to a villain what was done in ASSASSIN’S EDGE. The Russians did, and this book should give you some insight into what they are capable of in the real world. This is an Outstanding read! It holds you mesmerized to the last page. A big 5*! I can’t wait to see the next offering! This is a thriller you do not want to miss!