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Bob Lee Swagger has seen -- and delivered -- dozens of deaths. As a United States Marine sniper in Vietnam, his astonishing accuracy with a rifle earned him the nickname "Bob the Nailer"; twenty years later he was forced to kill again to unravel a brutal conspiracy (in Stephen Hunter's classic Point of Impact). Now happily secluded with his wife and young daughter in the Arizona desert, Swagger believes all the killing is behind him. Until a young writer, Russ Pewtie, arrives at his door with troubling questions about the past.
Forty years earlier, Swagger's father, a dedicated state trooper, was gunned down by two robbers in a sensational shoot-out just outside of Blue Eye, Arkansas. Faced with Russ's persistence and a desire to make peace with a father he never really knew, Swagger decides to discover what really happened that long-ago Arkansas night. But as soon becomes clear, powerful people don't want the truth uncovered -- and Swagger must use all his combat skills and ruthless cunning to survive.
Like the infrared "black light" that exposes a sniper's target in the dead of night, Swagger homes in on the shadowy figures desperate to keep the secret of his father's murder buried. And with the relentless you-must-turn-the-page suspense that is Stephen Hunter's trademark Black Light accelerates to its exhilarating climax -- an explosion of gunfire that blasts open the secrets of two generations.
With Black Light, Stephen Hunter solidifies his reputation as the best thriller writer in business.
Stephen Hunter spent two years in the United States Army and since 1971 has been on the staff of the Baltimore Sun, where he is now the film critic. Hes is the author of seven previous novels, including Dirty White Boys, Point of Impact and The Day Before Midnight. He lives in Columbia, Maryland.
463 pages, Hardcover
First published May 1, 1996
, but since I stuck with it, I turned out to be dead wrong! The main reason is because I was for the longest time very skeptical, because for about the first 150 pages it keeps going back and fourth from the past back to the present, but like I said, I'm glad that I stuck with it because the ending made reading all the flashbacks worth it.
, now married to the widow of his Vietnam friend, with a daughter, living happily on a ranch in Arizona. But one day a young reporter shows up at Swagger's doorstep, and Swagger who wants to be left along refuses to talk to him or do any interviews, but when the reporter says he's not there to talk about him but about Swagger's long deceased father, who was also a Marine during WWII and a State Policeman of Swagger's hometown of Arkansas, and who was supposedly gunned down in the mid 50's when chasing down 2 local boys for armed robbery, while also at the same time was investigating the rape and murder of a young woman the very same day.
(which I have yet to read), and Black Light.