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Euphrates Yield

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The third and final installment in David H. Hanks’ Carson Griffin series takes Griffin outside of the INWA’s jurisdiction to investigate a hidden nuclear reactor site along the banks of Syria’s Euphrates River. The Jihad Terrorist Symbol joins forces with Doku Umarov, a well-known Chechen terrorist, to smuggle parts and nuclear material into the region supplied by a rogue North Korean general with the goal of creating the most powerful weapons of mass destruction on Earth. To save the world from nuclear annihilation, Griffin has to stop the technology from falling into JTS’s hands—all while battling the grief of losing his wife. Can he put his need for vengeance aside and stop the radical terrorist cell before it’s too late?

302 pages, Kindle Edition

Published August 5, 2020

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David H. Hanks

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Profile Image for Kristine L..
660 reviews50 followers
March 14, 2024
This book tries hard to be a Tom Clancy-esque crime fiction, thriller, and spy/espionage story with a high octane kick. It falls short.

Recently widowed Carson Griffin has uncovered evidence of a clandestine nuclear program in Syria. The UN Security Council wants him to infiltrate and neutralize the whole shebang in this complicated, high stakes game of cat and mouse. Carson is a specially trained INWA inspector and covert op guy reminiscent of Clancy’s Jack Ryan or Ludlum’s Jason Bourne. Or maybe Superman. Except when Griffin jeopardizes both his own safety and his mission by losing control of his emotions. (Curiously, Griffin also seems confused about his deceased wife’s name: “Christy” or “Christie”? Both spellings appear in the book.)

Meanwhile, Russia wants to take care of the problem of continued resistance in Syria and maintain control over oil exports. There's also a bunch of North Korean henchmen roaming the countryside as well as the Mossad. The entire Middle East is about to go up like a Roman candle unless Carson can find out who’s supplying Syria with nuclear secrets and foil their evil plans. And what’s up with Viola Melkonian?

Acronyms and travel abound in this tangled web of spies, covert agents and double-crossers. The Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA). OPEC. The Jihad Terrorist Symbol (JTS). The INWA. Kuala Lumpur. Vienna. Pyongyang. The Med. Armenia. North Korea. Interpol. “The woman had no trouble, so she bought a piglet.”

This is an interesting story with lots of potential. But it takes forever to get going. Once it does get going, it can’t seem to find its stride. There are lots of bunny trails and White Rabbit chases which detract from the main storyline and dilute the plot. Do we really care how many pushups Carson does in his “athletic underwear”? The entire contents of his seemingly bottomless rucksack? The brand names of every appliance in his kitchen?

The story is badly over-written in places. In Chapter 6, for example, Griffin is met by “three guards dressed in U.S. Marine Corp uniforms” at the U.S. Embassy in Turkey. Why not just say, “Three Marines”? Also in Chapter 6, how do you stow a rifle “nearly out of sight” in a gun rack “behind the desk”? Additionally, when a sentence on page one includes the clunker, “stop their rate of decent (sic) toward the earth,” it’s downhill from there.

Meanwhile, the Euphrates doesn’t come into play until Chapter 14. Hope you left a trail of bread crumbs in prior chapters. You’re gonna need ‘em to find your way back to a coherent plot.

I bailed at Chapter 17 when Griffin kills three dogs inside a fighting cage. I don’t care if they’re Rottie/Pittie mixes. You kill dogs in your story, pal, and I’m GONE. As in, not wasting one more minute here.
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