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Type of bind: Mass Market Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN num: 9781416555506
ISBN number: 1416555501
Label: Baen
Manufacturer: Baen
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 432
Printing Date: May 20, 2008
Publishing house: Baen
Sale Popularity Level: 38328
Studio: Baen
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Product Description:
Sequel to Ghost, Kildar, Choosers of the Slain and Unto the Breach.
Heart-sick over the deaths of so many of his Keldara followers, and one in particular, former SEAL Mike Harmon, hero of Ghost, Kildar and Choosers of the Slain, decides to sit this one out. WMDs headed for the US no longer matter to the Kildar. But when his best friend and intel specialist both are seriously wounded in an ambush aimed at him, the Kildar gets his gameface back on.
Mike has always said that he's not a nice guy, and he's about to prove it to a boatload of terrorists and Colombian drug dealers. Set in the Bahamas and Florida Keys, A Deeper Blue is a fast moving thriller that never slows down from the very first page. With the return of some old faces, the action-packed novel proves, once again, the adage that sometimes it takes some very bad people to do good things.
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Rated by buyers
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This is the fifth and currently (August 08) most recent book in the series which began with "Ghost" and continued with "Kildar." I have seen the series described by the names of both those books and also "Paladin of Shadows." In this book Mike Harmon and his team return to the USA at the request of the President to try to stop a terrorist endeavor to attack various soft targets such as Disneyworld with lethal nerve gas.
All the books in this series feature either counter-terror operations or actual pitched battles against Islamic extremists, and have most of the characters vocally expressing very right wing views. All five of the books have villains who enjoy inflicting sexual violence against women, up to and including rape and murder, and the central character also has sexual tastes which range from the kinky to the completely out of order, so none of the books are suitable for anyone squeamish. "A deeper blue" has rather less in the way of sex than the very first few books in the series, but the central character appears to like shocking people, for example by openly referring to another character as his "harem manager."
(The reader who has not read the previous books will be thinking "What! Does that mean what I think it does?" The answer is yes.)
"A Deeper Blue", like the second, third and fourth books in the series, is less outrageous, and a bit better written, than "Ghost" but still pushes the envelope hard in several places. It also, for the very first time in the series, presents one of the Muslims caught up in the activities of the terrorists as a decent human being who tries to limit the harm caused by his co-religionists. Nevertheless, as a rough litmus test, if you were strongly against the Iraq war, vote Democrat (especially if you like Bill and Hillary Clinton), are very pro-feminist, or are even slightly prudish, do your blood pressure a favour and refrain from touching this entire series with a ten foot barge-pole.
Former SEAL Mike Harmon, codename Ghost, after fighting and defeating a number of terrorist plots, has settled down in a remote valley in the country of Georgia where he bought the local castle.
The area concerned does not actually exist, but if it did, Russian tanks would have been rampaging through it while I was reading this book. I couldn't help thinking "Typical - as soon as Mike and his troops are off in the states Putin invades!"
It turns out that the castle and associated farmland which Mike bought came with some feudal retainers, the Keldara, who accept him as their liege lord or "Kildar" - and if that sounds wierd and anachronistic at the start of the 21st century you ain't read nothing yet.
Since Chechen terrorists are a major nuisance in the area on both sides of the Georgian/Russian frontier, Mike Harmon has trained some of his Keldara as an anti-terrorist militia with the knowledge and support of the Georgian, Russian, and US governments. (This was written at a time when relations between Russia and Georgia were merely bad, which is reflected in the book, but before they deteriorated into war and invasion.)
During the previous book, an anti-terorist operation in search of stolen WMD (Weapons of Mass Destruction) led that militia into a pitched battle with a brigade of 4,000 Chechens which resulted in heavy casualties on both sides. The Keldara won, but at the start of the book Mike has locked himself away, grieving because a girl he was in love with was one of those killed.
Mike and the Keldara had previously smashed a criminal conspiracy in which senior figures in the governments of most of the world's most powerful governments were implicated. The guilty individuals concerned have been quietly removed from power, but now Mike Harmon has both friends and enemies in all those governments. The pricipal effect of this in "A deeper blue" is that John Ringo can fantasise about his characters being able to say exactly what they think to assorted idiots, stuffed shirts, liberals and left-wingers (I am not associating these concepts, but the book does) and any appeal to higher authority on the part of those outraged at such comments hits a brick wall.
Initially Mike Harmon does not want to respond to the request to go back to the USA and hunt for nerve gas, as he is too busy grieving. But he allows some of his people to go, and when two of them walk into a trap meant for Mike, anger snaps him back to himself: the terrorists soon won't know what hit them.
One or two of Mike's old friends from "Ghost" also make an appearence in this book.
The full "Paladin of Shadows" series currently consists of
Ghost
Kildar
Choosers of the Slain
Into the Breach
A Deeper Blue
John Ringo normally writes military SF and most of his offerings in that genre are extremely ... Read More
Rated by buyers
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If you're looking for bunnies to kiss and trees to hug, this book and the series as a whole most definitely ain't gonna meet your warm and fuzzy needs. I've read some complaints that this book is too 'right wing'. Well, heck, that's what many of us are looking for ... 'right wing' writing. The entire series is action packed, gritty, dark and, yes, conservative in slant. As a former Marine, it's tough sometimes to find books that really speak to the way I think politically and these do it. Not to mention that Ringo writes spot on, kick butt and take names military action sequences that are hard to find elsewhere. Bottom line, if you want hardcore action with no holds barred, this series is tough to beat! I recommend it wholeheartedly!
Rated by buyers
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I've read most of Ringo's work and was looking forward to this book but the heavy handed way he treats democrats in general and President Clinton in particular is too much to take. Ringo goes so far as to actually say on page 85 of the paperback edition, "God damn the Clinton administration." I guess he thinks that gas, a depressed economy and endless war in the Middle East are preferable to peace and prosperity.
Beyond his upfront far right opinions expressed throughout the book and his palpable hatred of Arabs that just jumps off the pages, this book has a real lack of depth of character development and lots of stilted dialogue.
Rated by buyers
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Kildar comes back and the book has top notch action with decent character development. Not a top Ringo effort but close and much better this deep into a series than he usually does.
Some details. Kildar is boozing it up in grief when the President calls needing help with terrs smuggling in WMD - VX gas. With Kildar drinking himself into oblivion, his advisors take the mission and are rather amateurishly trapped with his advisors/friends wounded. Kildar hears this and springs back into action. The ambush of his buddies was poorly conceived in my opinion. I do not think an ex-SEAL Chief would be so foolish and easily sucked in. Just does not ring true to type in the real world.
Anyway, Kildar to the rescue. Ringo does a pretty good job in character portrayal with Kildar. He does a better job showing the concern of the Kildara for their Kildar. The author resurrects Bambi as a USSOCOM INTEL analyst but treats her character rather woodenly.
Character development was not up to Ringo standards but good.
Side note - author does a good job of making some pretty common sense points on how we are conducting GWOT in this book. That will anger liberals. Given how the author handles the President (well in my opinion), I would like to see how he handles a liberal President working with the Kildar. That could be interesting.
Back to the book.
But the actions scenes.... And the use of varied toys made up for the lower than usual character work. The action scenes are superb. These make the book more than another failing effort to continue a series that Ringo usually produces by this time. This is definitely his best effort this late into a series to date.
It is well worth the read and I hope Ringo can keep the quality level up. If this is not the end of the series and there are some indications that it may be. We shall see.
Rated by buyers
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I really liked Ghost, the very first book, it was well written and loaded with sex and violence! And Mr. Ringo did a great job placing me, the reader in the heads of his characters. It was a very stimulating and impressive read. The books leading up to and including "A Deeper Blue", were less engaging. The way it was written gave me facts and details of events with very little conection to the thoughts and feelings of the books characters. I wanted more....
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