Rules of Vengeance

Rules of Vengeance
by Christopher Reich

Rules of Vengeance
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Book Summary Information

Author: Christopher Reich
Edition: Hardcover
Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published)
Published: 2009-08-04
ISBN: 0385524072
Number of pages: 432
Publisher: Doubleday

Book Reviews of Rules of Vengeance

Book Review: Conventional thriller; good summer read
Summary: 4 Stars

Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
This is one of those rare sequels that is actually better than its predecessor, leaving me in hope that Christopher Reich is back to the excellent form he displayed in his first few novels (especially The Runner). However, I strongly recommend anyone thinking of picking it up to begin with Rules of Deception, which introduces the reader to the altruistic Jonathan Ramsay, a doctor who toils at refugee camps in the hottest of the world's hot spots, and his wife Emma, who turns out to be a very mysterious individual indeed.

Some of the secrets behind Emma's true identity as an agent for Division, a 'black' covert ops group run by American intelligence officials, are revealed early on in the first book, but there are a lot more in store for readers of this sequel, which begins with Ransom's trip to attend a medical conference in London. There, he encounters his wife for the first time since she went undercover to escape Division's wrath for foiling one of their plots six months previously. But has 'Emma' popped up only because she can't live without seeing him any longer, or is he part of an elaborate cover scheme for a deep and devious plot? Ransom forgoes his scheduled speech at the medical convention to follow Emma through London -- then suddenly they are both present at the site of a car bomb that wreaks havoc on a convoy of foreign diplomats and unwary passers-by. The intelligence officials that have been keeping an eye on Ransom as part of their quest to get hold of Emma, now wonder if he isn't conspiring with her to commit mayhem...

The plot revolves around Jonathan's battle to clear his name, a battle that he fears will pit him against Emma, rather than putting the two of them on the same side as was the case in the first novel. Reich does a good job of displaying Ransom's ambivalence about this -- he recognizes that Emma has been manipulating him in some way, to some unknown end, and yet struggles to relinquish his long-cherished feelings for him. At times, his quest to reveal her real identity and mission lead him back to places they experienced together, and Ransom struggles both to remain free and stay focused on his task.

The ultimate test of any thriller is plausibility. Not in the sense of "do I really think this happened", but "did the author convince me enough that it could have happened the way he described, so that I didn't pause in incredulity too much." Reich passes this, for the most part. At some points in the narrative, Ransom sounds implausibly skilled at intelligence craftwork for a doctor, saving his life and liberty over and over again. But in all those cases, the writing is fast-faced enough and the story moves forward swiftly enough that all but the most demanding readers will find it satisfying.

This isn't of the same high standard as books like Stieg Larsson's breathtaking The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (Vintage) or Olen Steinhauer's The Tourist. But it's a perfectly solid espionage thriller, with lots of edge-of-the-seat actions, characters who may be heroes or villains (or neither!) and the classic Hitchockian hero, the ordinary man caught up in a drama that he can't really understand but can't avoid. It won't linger in your memory, but it will keep your attention every second that you're reading it.

If you're looking for excellent, overlooked thrillers, try these. Murray Davies delivers still more chills and spills in the wake of a car bombing in Dogs in the Street. I award that book my ultimate accolade for any thriller: even though I know exactly what happens, I can still reread it and gasp in suspense at the same plot twists each time. Another thriller that kicks off with a street bombing is the equally-excellent debut book by Henry Porter, Remembrance Day. Both well worth seeking out for more chills and thrills.

Summary of Rules of Vengeance

A riveting sequel to the New York Times bestseller Rules of Deception that confirms Christopher Reich as the master of the espionage thriller.

Months after foiling an attack on a commercial jetliner, Doctors Without Borders physician Jonathan Ransom is working under an assumed name in a remote corner of Africa while his wife, Emma, desperate to escape the wrath of Division, the secret American intelligence agency she betrayed, has vanished into the netherworld of international espionage. Both look forward to sharing a stolen weekend in London?until an ambush on a convoy of limousines turns their romantic rendezvous into a terrorist bloodbath.

In the aftermath, Emma disappears and Jonathan is apprehended by the police and threatened with life imprisonment unless he helps secure his wife?s capture. Faced with an impossible decision, Jonathan makes a daring escape. On the run, he realizes that his only option is to become a spy himself in order to track down Emma and discover the true nature of the conspiracy she appears to be masterminding. In the process, Jonathan begins to realize that all along he?s been a pawn in a high-stakes game of international intrigue and one-upsmanship far beyond his imagining.
Vince Flynn Reviews Rules of Vengeance

Vince Flynn is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of nine previous thrillers, including Consent to Kill, Act of Treason, and Protect and Defend. He lives in the Twin Cities with his wife and three children. Read his guest review of Christopher Reich's Rules of Vengeance:

Last summer, before I picked up Christopher Reich?s Rules of Deception, I?d heard it was the kind of smart, high-octane international thriller that would take me back to tales of espionage and political intrigue written by the masters?like Frederick Forsyth, Ken Follett, and Robert Ludlum. Those books were propulsive mixes of fact and fiction, set in a combustible, all-too-real world where peace balanced on a razor?s edge and nuclear annihilation was a single bullet away. The best of them, like Forsyth?s The Fourth Protocol and Ludlum?s The Bourne Identity, left you wondering if they might, in fact, be true. Might something like this really happen?

Then came the 1990?s. The Iron Curtain fell. Russia imploded. And Japan suffered a severe economic crisis. The world was left with America as its sole superpower. The bomb had been defused. We felt safe. And so ended the domination of international espionage blockbusters on the bestseller lists.

Along came Rules of Deception. Was it really a return to the big blockbuster of the 70?s and 80?s? Critics certainly were embracing it with gusto. So it was with some excitement and no small amount of skepticism that I picked up the book. The story started like a rocket and picked up speed from there. By page 20, I knew the critics had gotten it right. Rules of Deception was the very definition of a blockbuster: a lone, intrepid hero battling immense odds to save the world from a cataclysmic battle while also regaining the love of a fallen woman.

Now, Reich gives us Rules of Vengeance. Sequels are rarely as good as the original, so again, I was skeptical. And yet, Rules of Vengeance turns out to be that rare exception?where the novel not only stands up to its predecessor, but actually takes the story and characters in new?and completely surprising?directions. Again we meet Dr. Jonathan Ransom, a surgeon for Doctors Without Borders. The story begins with his arrival in London to deliver an address at a prestigious international medical conference, and it takes off from there at mach speed, offering more twists than the Monaco Grand Prix. I?m not going to give away any of the unexpected plot turns (and there are many), but I will say that once again, Ransom quickly finds himself in trouble not of his own making. And, once again, he is forced to maneuver between the good guys and the bad guys in order to figure out just what he?s been pulled into, and then make sure that no one else suffers because of it. The stakes are sky high. The locales are exotic. The plot is ripped from tomorrow?s headlines and Reich controls the story with a deft hand from beginning to end.

What?s particularly appealing about Jonathan Ransom is he is not a spy or a trained assassin. He is, in fact, the opposite: a doctor who has devoted his life to helping others?a loner working outside political boundaries who exemplifies the best in us all. But like each of us, he has a dark side that is both frightening and compelling. You do not want to make this man angry.

As for Christopher Reich, he?like Ransom?also may not be a trained spy or assassin (at least not to the best of my knowledge). But he certainly does manipulate the twists, summon the adrenaline, and create a landscape of thrills that can only leave readers with one lasting impression: Chris Reich is the real deal. ?Vince Flynn

(Photo © Peter Hurley)

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