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Edgar Award-winning author Thomas Perry writes thrillers that move “almost faster than a speeding bullet” (Wall Street Journal). The Old Man is his latest whip-smart standalone novel.
To all appearances, Dan Chase is a harmless retiree in Vermont with two big mutts and a grown daughter he keeps in touch with by phone. But most sixty-year-old widowers don’t have multiple driver’s licenses, savings stockpiled in banks across the country, and a bugout kit with two Beretta Nanos stashed in the spare bedroom closet. Most have not spent decades on the run. Thirty-five years ago, as a young hotshot in army intelligence, Chase was sent to Libya to covertly assist a rebel army. When the plan turned sour, Chase reacted according to his own ideas of right and wrong, triggering consequences he could never have anticipated. And someone still wants him dead because of them. Just as he had begun to think himself finally safe, Chase must reawaken his survival instincts to contend with the history he has spent his adult life trying to escape. Armed mercenaries, spectacularly crashed cars, a precarious love interest, and an unforgettable chase scene through the snow—this is lethal plotting from one of the best in crime fiction.
283 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 3, 2017
Excellent.
I loved this novel a great deal.
It’s a must for any Thomas Perry fan.
Thirty-five years ago when the Old Man was a young guy named Dan Chase and working for Army intelligence, he was assigned to deliver several million dollars to a Libyan strong man. This Libyan was supposed to supply an army of rebels with weapons and everything else needed to topple Muammar Gaddafi from power with money provided by American power-brokers. After risking his life to make this delivery, young Dan Chase is appalled to find that the Libyan strong man has decided to keep the money for his own creature comforts. The rebels will all starve to death or be captured, tortured and executed by Gaddafi's soldiers. The Libyan strong man will grow older in comfort and prosper. The American power-brokers will be sorely embarrassed but what the hell - it's not their money ...it's U. S. tax-payer money.
So, Dan Chase steals the money back with the intention of returning the money to the government of the United States.
Instead, his superiors sever all contact with Dan Chase and abandon him as a traitor to his own country. A disgrace to Army Intelligence.
The several million dollars Dan Chase has stolen back from the Libyan strong man are to be his consolation prize.
Thirty-five years later, living under a different name, various unknown men with Arabic accents show up attempting to murder the Old Man.
Killing him will prove to be an objective not easily realized.
As one young intelligence contractor assigned to aid the unknown assassins who come after the Old Man observes:
"He had warned his superior officers. He had told them a couple of times that the old man wasn't just an old man, like somebody's uncle. He was old the way a seven-foot rattlesnake was old."


I don't have dogs. Then again, I haven't been living for more than 35 years under a false name. (Now that I come to think about it, maybe I'm not that old altogether.)
But the Old Man has, and while he thought his old life to be dead and buried in the ground, life has a way to come back and haunt you. Could the ghosts of his past really come back to haunt him after all this time?

It can, and watching him being smart and clever and showing the younger talents sent after him that even as an old fart he's still a league above them (at least) is quite fun.
It's a page turner (and yes, the series took many liberties deriving from the script, I can tell that much after the first 4 episodes), an exciting thriller that's perfect for this time of the year.
I'll rate it 4 stars, because there are a few things that where left too open ended for my taste. I'm missing the final conclusion to Zoe's fate, for an instant. And I think the first event that set everything into motion is a little hollow. (The series hasn't revealed everything yet, but it's clear they are constructing it in a different way, maybe even a better and more relatable one.) The daughter's role in the novel is a very meager sideshow that could have been so much more - wait until you see the series, where she's so much more than just 4 pages.