From Publishers Weekly:
Predictable plotting and one-dimensional characters destroy the reader's expectations for Stevenson's newest thriller. Col. Zia Gabbiya, a Khadafy-like Middle Eastern potentate, infiltrates and takes command of a former British colony resembling Bermuda. Working through shell corporations, he's also managed to acquire a stranglehold on the world's financial system, which he threatens to destroy. Moreover, the Vietnamese, thirsting for revenge against the U.S., are supporting him, and behind this old enemy lurks anotherthe Soviet Union. There's talk of a Grenada-style raid to neutralize the Colonel, but pusillanimous politicians and hand-wringing bureaucrats in Washington are paralyzed with indecision. Then the CIA decides to "get Gabbiya" by activating Pete Casey, a former Navy pilot who was shot down and imprisoned by the North Vietnamese. Casey is reluctant, but he's also obsessed with MIAsAmericans still thought to be held in Vietnamese jailsand there's an MIA angle to the Gabbiya-Vietnam connection. He agrees to the mission, but the narrative remains earth-bound. Stevenson's best, A Man Called Intrepid, continually astonishes the reader. This novel is nowhere near that standard.
Copyright 1987 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal:
Zia Gabbiya, a Quaddafi-like Arab head of state, learns the United States plans to lure him into a confrontation on neutral ground in the Caribbean and dispose of him in a permanent manner. Intrigued by the possibilities, Gabbiya resolves to turn the trap to his advantage and thus once again assert his superiority over his enemies. Into this atmosphere of plot and counterplot comes Pete Casey, late of the U.S. Navy and the Hanoi Hilton, and a host of heroes, heroines, and villainsall of whom pursue conflicting and converging courses of action with increasingly deadly results. This work is filled with so many twists and turns that the reader is perpetually two pages behind the action. Still, fans of Stevenson, especially known for his nonfiction book, A Man Called Intrepid , and various thrillers, will relish this. J.K. Sweeney, History Dept., South Dakota State Univ., Brookings
Copyright 1987 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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