Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer

Family Friendly Appropriate Book Reviews Hard Road John Reznick

Hard Road by J.B. TurnerTitle: Hard Road

Author: J.B. Turner

Pages: 285

Publisher: J.B. Turner

Publication Date: 3 March 2015

Rating: ★★★


"Sometimes, to protect what you care about, you need to operate outside the police force…"

Since his wife died on 9/11, Jon Reznick has worked hard to continue his shadowy globe hidden from his 11 year-old girl. Simply when he's ordered by his handler to assassinate a human being in an sectional Washington DC hotel, he discovers the target is non at all who he at offset appears to exist. Quickly ensnared in a web of murder, extortion and treachery, Reznick finds himself fighting to outwit not only the clandestine group intent on hunting him downwards, but besides to evade capture past FBI Banana Manager Martha Meyerstein. But it's non just Reznick'southward survival that's at stake. A terrifying plot past a strange government to bring the United States to its knees is underway. And simply Reznick can cease it.


I was expecting a lot from this book. It's marketed towards fans of Vince Flynn, Lee Kid and Brad Thor while other reviews of the volume claim that it is similar to Mark Greaney and David Baldacci. Considering that those five are all in my superlative ten favourite authors, I was expecting Hard Route to be right up my alley.

Having read the book, I can meet where the comparisons come from because the master character Jon Reznick is cut from the aforementioned cloth as those he is ofttimes compared with. However I don't feel the volume was quite on the aforementioned level as those written by Child, Flynn and Greaney. Information technology has the same fast-paced and activity-packed plot merely it doesn't have the same level of polish.

Hard Road is the first instalment in J.B. Turner's spy thriller series featuring assassin Jon Reznick. The story begins with Reznick being sent in to "clean up a mess" only to find that he has stumbled upon a case of mistaken identity. As the story evolves, Reznick's daughter is dragged into the fold and he must save her while also trying to solve a terrorist plot.

The book contains everything you expect from the genre. It has a lone-wolf main character with a shady groundwork, a credible and interesting terrorist plot and a lot of fighting, shooting and explosions. Reznick is a stiff graphic symbol and his backstory is fleshed out pretty well throughout Hard Route but in that location is nonetheless a lot to learn. There is fifty-fifty a hint of romance in the book that I wasn't quite expecting and I am interested to encounter how Turner expands on that and on Reznick himself in the next book.

The primary reason that I say that Hard Road is non quite to the same level every bit the heavyweights of the genre is because I don't remember Turner has quite found the residue between the activity and the plot. What I hateful past this is that I felt that Difficult Road got also bogged down with dialogue through the last two thirds of the book. Especially through the middle of the book, the scenes with Meyerstein focused too heavily on dialogue and as a result I felt I was being told what happened rather than being shown. The very best are groovy finding the balance betwixt the demand for those types of scenes with the demand for action scenes and I feel Turner just missed that balance.

My other complaint is that the book contains too many characters. While information technology probably is accurate that the FBI would have hundreds of analysts working on a serious case like the one in the volume, it doesn't really make for good reading. When you accept names thrown at you from left, right and centre, it becomes difficult to keep track of who is who outside of the main scattering of characters and that detracted from my enjoyment of the story.

Worth a read?If you enjoy the action-packed stories of Flynn, Thor, Greaney, Coes or anyone else who writes in the same style only are also interested in the behind-the-scenes fashion that government agencies reply to terrorist threats then Hard Road would be worth a read for y'all.

★★★☆☆

greshamroutionce.blogspot.com

Source: https://wortharead.wordpress.com/2016/01/24/hard-road-jb-turner/

Post a Comment for "Family Friendly Appropriate Book Reviews Hard Road John Reznick"