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Friday, July 06, 2018

Orphan X by Gregg Hurwitz

"The Nowhere Man is a legendary figure spoken about only in whispers. It's said that when he's reached by the truly desperate and deserving, the Nowhere Man can and will do anything to protect and save them."  --from description

Orphan X is a black ops assassin trained from childhood by an off-the-books government program that, as so many of these secret programs do, goes awry.  When ordered to kill another "orphan,"  Evan Smoak decides the problems in the program run too deep to ignore.  Using the training and finances he has received, Evan builds an untraceable life.  

What to do with the skills he has mastered?  Since he doesn't have an alternate career path, Evan embarks on missions to protect the innocent, his only requirement is that whomever he helps must pass his Nowhere Man name and number to someone else in difficult circumstances.  One mission at a time, Evan pursues the despicable evil-doers.

What I liked:  Exciting and full of adventurous action.  Kind of...action fantasy.

What I disliked:  1)  The emphasis on the aesthetic treatment of alcohol.  I mean, Evan doesn't drink much, but when he does the alcohol is really special--distilled 7 or 9 times, blah, blah, blah.   2)  Too many, too detailed fight scenes.  While realizing the need to establish his fighting skills and variety of techniques, describing it punch by jab becomes filler rather than fun.  I get it.  Hurwitz knows what he's talking about and/or has expert researchers.

OK--so Evan Smoak is a high-tech Jack Reacher.  Hurwitz gets a lot of background and details established in this first book and it is fun when things are moving.  It took me a little while to decide whether or not I liked it because of the excess of information setting up Evan's knowledge of alcohol, martial arts, and weapons, but I did end up enjoying it. Don't we all wish for a superhero kind of vigilante to defeat and punish the bad guys?

Once you accept that this is fantasy-vigilante-hero stuff--Orphan X is great fun.  I liked Evan Smoak and cheered him on, but a lot of bad people die.

NetGalley/St. Martin's Press

Techno-thriller.  2016.  Print length:  367 pages








8 comments:

  1. This is probably NOT the book for me. :)

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    1. He's the Die Hard kind of anti-hero. The Nowhere Man helps the innocent, but bad guys don't get any sympathy--sex traffickers and drug lords, beware. :)

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  2. The premise sounds interesting but I guess I'll probably get bored by too much info dumping. :p

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    1. I understand that Bradley Cooper may be in a film based on the book. Not too much chance for the info dump in a film, they can do it by showing vodka labels! :)

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  3. I tried this but couldn't quite get into it and until now, I couldn't quite place why, but you hit the nail on the head -- it's the excess of detail that did me in. Now I'm wondering if I should give it another go with that in mind.

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    1. Yes, and the tech detail. Readers are capable of filling in the facts with fewer details! :)

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  4. Sounds a little like James Bond with the exact kind of drink etc.

    This is probably something I would enjoy more in an adaptation than actually reading it. Like the Hunt for Red October - loved the movie, not a fan of Clancy's books however...

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    1. :) You may be right about the movie being better than the book--keeping closer to the plot and letting images provide the detail. James Bond may have been an inspiration for the character's skills and affectations! Didn't think about that....

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