SUBJECTIVE READER REVIEW FOLLOWS:
My first foray into Stephen Hunter's catalogue was the suggestion of fellow reviewer/critic Dan Legare, who read me like an open book making the recommendation that I begin Hunter's collection with book 3, not book 1, of the Bob Lee Swagger series. It took a good 100 pages for the novel to become the latest form of addictive drug, but Hunter somehow built a hybrid of 'American Sniper' and 'Forrest Gump' that all but made me relive my days of living in Washington as a young USAF lieutenant in the mid-1970s. The iconic landmarks and lifestyle references made this damn book fit like your favorite jeans. The front half of the book leaves the reader feeling desperately sorry for poor Marine Corporal Donny Fenn, whose beautiful young wife becomes recycled as his boss' second wife. Hunter pulls this off smoothly because of the 58,000+ American boys that died in that nightmare, the ones left living had to redefine their lives somehow. This book could easily be the epitome of 'all is not as it appears.' In the cruelest twist of all, the hard ass Naval officer that sent Donny off to Vietnam for three months to be hunted like sporting game turns out to be the grand manipulator in the end--but I ain't spoiling it for ya. This novel's got all of the redneck frustration of a 100 country songs, but in this case the redneck-Swagger from Arkansas-is also a supremely intelligent animal. Here's the deal; if you liked Nelson DeMille's 'Up Country,' I WILL GUARANTEE you will love 'Time to Hunt.' Plain and simple, this is one of the 10 best books I've ever read, and that includes 500+ novels in the last five years alone. 'Time to Hunt' might not be up there with Stuart Woods' 'Chiefs' or Vince Flynn's 'Term Limits' but it's up there, believe me. Your only problem might be finding it, as 'Time to Hunt' was published in 1998, but it's worth the time and effort to find a copy, put on those comfortable jeans and prepare yourself for slowing down as you approach the end, not wanting the freaking action to end on ya. My word as an author--this book ROCKS!
SPOILER PLOT SUMMARY FOLLOWS:
Soviet Mole in Deep Cover. Washington, DC, in spring of 1971 was a war zone, or rather a war protesters' zone, with nearly continuous demonstrations against the ongoing war in Vietnam. Marine Corporal Donny Fenn, already having served a tour in The Land of Bad Things is assigned to the garrison at 8th & I Streets, part of a Funeral Company doing ceremonial burials at Arlington National Cemetery. His high school girl Julie is now a war demonstrator from Arizona and they meet, determined to complete their vows to one another to marry when possible. The Naval Investigative Service-long before Jethro Gibbs made it famous-is deeply involved in ferreting out the criminal aspects of the peaceniks, and extort Donny Fenn into going undercover to spy on one of his fellow grunts. He does so, meeting some heavies in the antiwar movement and is promised promotion for his testimony against Lance Corporal Ed Crowe. When the bust goes down, Fenn is branded the traitor by his fellow Marines, listens to Julie and Trig Carter-an antiwar Moses-and refuses to testify at Crowe's court martial. Washington Navy Yard NIS Head Ward Bonson goes hermatile, banishing Fenn to Vietnam even though he's got only 13 months left in his enlistment. Fenn meets and is taken under the wing of Bob the Nailer, the most terrifying of Marine snipers assigned to their Central Highlands AOR. As fate would have it, Donny survives assured death at Kham Duc, a special forces irregular camp near the Laotian border, backing SSGT Bob Swagger up as he disrupts and entire Division of NVA regulars heading to overrun Kham Duc. On his last day in country, Donny is killed by a Soviet sniper sent in to kill him, even though he and Swagger thought they'd killed Solaratov earlier. Swagger is hailed the hero but was shot thru the pelvis just before Donny bought it. After 2+ years of rehab he rejoins the Corps, his life a nightmare as bourbon is the only thing to ease his pain. After a few years he and Donny's widow Julie hook up, marry and have a daughter Nikki. Out riding the mountains one morning in Arizona, a sniper kills a neighbor riding with Julie and Nikki, then turns the gun on Julie, wounding but not killing her. In the subsequent investigation, Bob moves to Idaho to hide while he seeks out the sniper, who is the same Solaratov, just recycled by the KGB/SVR. Ultimately, Solaratov finds the hide ranch in Idaho and stakes it during a freak spring snow storm. Swagger, now in league with DDCI Ward Bonson, takes a HALO chute dive into the LZ, narrowly avoids death and finally kills Solaratov. In the debrief to this 'hunt,' it's Julie that Solaratov was after, as she was one of four people to identify Soviet deep cover spy Evgeny Pashin, now a star in post-Soviet Russia running for President. Pashin's involvement in the hit on Julie results in his own assassination and all is quiet. Swagger makes one last trip to Trig Carter's mother to tell her of his passing, and how he was not the target but a math student who'd developed math algorithms for satellite imagery. He finds Trig's last notes/drawings, which reveal Bonson as a contact of Pashin's in 1971. Using a claymore mine Bonson gave him for his hunt mission for Solaratov, Swagger confronts Bonson who confesses all, confident his five Spetsnaz guards will secure him. Swagger exits the warehouse the lone man standing and heads west.