'Strange the things our fates pivoted a kid selling gum and candy, a hard charger in a hurry, and a beached spook with a bad attitude.' The beached spook is Frank Thorpe, in limbo having recently left an off-the-books American Intelligence unit after an operation went down river. The 'hard charger' was a stranger whom Frank saw mow down a young kid selling sweets at the airport and keep going without so much as a backward glance. Almost on a whim Frank decides to use all his skills and resources to give that stranger what they call in his trade 'a wake up'. Not that Thorpe intends any permanent damage, just a little tap to get the hard charger's attention, to show him how quickly the storm clouds could roll in on his little world. Unfortunately, the little 'wake up' sets up a chain reaction which ends in far more serious ramifications than Frank could ever have anticipated. And as Thorpe tries to mend things he himself finds someone from his own past is out to give him a rather bigger 'wake up'.
Robert Ferrigno is an American author of crime novels and of speculative fiction. I've written twelve novels in the last twenty years, most crime thrillers. Sins of the Assassin was a finalist for the Edgar, Best Novel, by the Mystery Writers of America in 2008, and my comic short story, "Can I Help You Out?" won the Silver Dagger, Best Short Story, by the Mystery Association of Great Britain.
Read in 2004. A story of redemption and revenge. For some reason I didn't mark any novels in 2004 as my favorites, the only year I didn't do that. This was my last book of the year. I read 84 books in 2004.
Frank, former member of covert operations group, witnesses a businessman injure a young boy by rushing by & knocking him down. Frank hates that kind of arrogance and decides the man needs a wake-up call, something that will get his attention, make him realize his behavior is unacceptable. However, things don't always work the way we plan, and the wake-up ultimately puts the businessman and his family in harms way from the seemingly innocent vehicle - a woman Frank picked for the call. So now we have a social-climbing wife (the wake-up pick), her surfer dude husband (they run a large illegal drug operation), their two killer strong-arm enforcers, the head of the covert operations (who wants Frank to come back), and the Engineer (the man Frank was trying to kill when he finally quit AND who is trying to kill Frank) all interacting because of the failed wake-up. And let's throw in a couple of deaths of innocents because they happened to be in the path of some of the above. Frank, Frank, Frank - how will you get things resolved?
I had my doubts when I began this book, thinking the premise a little weak. A badass witnesses a minor injustice and decides to get back at the guy who did it. So straightforward as to be a little...tame. But the author handled the plot with skill, building up the complexity and the stakes to make for a really wild ride. The protagonist goes from James Bond in a slump to a hardened operative navigating a world of drug dealers, temptresses, assassins, and corrupt DEA agents. Ferrigno's prose is both clever and punchy, his characters memorable. Overall, a nice, evenly burning thriller from start to finish.
Frank Thorpe, hard-nosed but fair-minded ex-Shop (read: TLA) operative, witnesses a self-centered businessman casually injure a beggar-type kid at an airport and decides to give the guy a "wake-up" call -- something intended not to ruin the guy's life, but to get his attention and make him a little more considerate. The wake-up goes awry and quite a few people end up dead before Frank can straighten things out. A fun read a la Hiaasen.
I hadn't heard of this book of the author before I began reading. It turned out to be a delightful surprise. In the style of Elmore Leonard, a hero who isn't quite pure, villains who aren't quite criminal masterminds and a plot that meanders through the drug and surfing world of Southern California. No social comments or earthshaking revelations, just a well crafted mystery. I'm sure I'll be reading more from Mr. Ferrigno.
Really good thriller. Thorpe is pretty cool and Ferrigno can write! The genre is hardboiled action like Hiassen, Hunter, Gischler, Crais etc... Not as good as Hunter or Crais but definitely worth my looking for other titles. Ferrigno may end up an equal to Crais or Hunter whose books I have read in their entirety so the comparison is heavily lopsided.
The latest book (as I type) from Mr. Ferrigno is about a guy who is let go from a shady government law-enforcement group after accidentally getting his team killed. He decides to freelance to make up for his mistake; he also decides to teach a hard-charging slimeball a lesson. These two threads intertwine in interesting ways, and the payoff is satisfactory.
A book of revenge, retribution, and sometimes you get what you asked for but don't like it. Ferrigno is becoming a favorite writer for me. I look for his books when searching for new reading material.
Nobody captures the off-the-wall anarchy of Southern California better than Ferrigno. Or the way the best-laid plans can blow up in your face when you're dealing with psychopaths... Another wild ride from one of the best stylists in the business.
I didn't like it much at the start. I needed more details about what happened with Kimberly, everything was rushed and no fun to read at all. But after a couple of chapters it got good.
I had some trouble staying with the twists and turns...but in the end I found this to be well written and enjoyable. I look forward to seeing his next book.