Detail

Title: The Devil's Hand (Terminal List #4) ISBN: 9781982123741
· Hardcover 524 pages
Genre: Fiction, Thriller, Audiobook, War, Military Fiction, Mystery Thriller, Suspense, Spy Thriller, Espionage, Mystery, Action

The Devil's Hand (Terminal List #4)

Published April 13th 2021 by Atria/Emily Bestler Books, Hardcover 524 pages

It’s been 20 years since 9/11. Two decades since the United States was attacked on home soil and embarked on 20 years of war. The enemy has been patient, learning, and adapting. And the enemy is ready to strike again.

A new president offers hope to a country weary of conflict. He’s a young, popular, self-made visionary…but he’s also a man with a secret.

Halfway across the globe a regional superpower struggles with sanctions imposed by the Great Satan and her European allies, a country whose ancient religion spawned a group of ruthless assassins. Faced with internal dissent and extrajudicial targeted killings by the United States and Israel, the Supreme Leader puts a plan in motion to defeat the most powerful nation on earth.

Meanwhile, in a classified facility five stories underground, a young PhD student has gained access to a level of bioweapons known only to a select number of officials. A second-generation agent, he has been assigned a mission that will bring his adopted homeland to its knees.

User Reviews

Kay

Rating: really liked it
[Chris Pratt (hide spoiler)]


Mark Elliott

Rating: really liked it
First of all, I have to preface this review with this statement. Any thing I say will only do a disservice to this novel and its author Jack Carr.
Jack Carr once said that his third book, SAVAGE SON was his homage to LAST OF THE BREED by louis l'amour, THE MOST DANGEROUS GAME by Richard Connell and other books that affected him as a young reader. I can very easily imagine reading in the near future an aspiring new author claiming that their novel is an homage to THE DEVIL'S HAND by Jack Carr.
THE DEVIL'S HAND is not just a Thriller. It is a cautionary tale along with a history lesson. Jack Carr's ability to make a reader feel real emotion while reading, once again places him at the top of my favorite authors list. Hooked from the prologue, I did not want to put the book down when I had to. I love how Jack Carr did a quick recap of his first three books in the first chapter, gave a shout out to Brad Thor (another one of my favorite authors), and made me understand and feel empathy for the bad guys, not just hate them. If you have not started reading Jack Carr's books, there is no time like the present. Check out officialjackcarr.com for the synopsis of the book that I think will be at the top of everyone's favorite book of 2021.


Matt

Rating: really liked it
Jack Carr has developed a series that mixes captivating political intrigue with personal experiences working on the dark side of American covert missions. These novels not only force the reader to think about what’s going on around them, but also provides an exhilarating mission to keep the country safe from powerful enemies. While it has been two decades since the largest act of terror on US soil, few have forgotten. Some within the Administration want to ensure those responsible pay the ultimate price, feeling that the core planning group remains at large. A new threat is being developed, one that could cripple America once again. Will the country be ready and react, or remain hopeless once again? Carr proves that he’s one of the strongest writers in the genre.

After the attacks on September 11, 2001, America smouldered, but would not succumb. Twenty years of reflection and war on the enemy, showing their might, but also a means by which they plan, execute, and progress on the battlefield. This has not gone unnoticed by those who helped plan the previous attack, and it is high time for a new strike, one that no one will (again) see coming.

While the US has been trying to make sense of what happened those years ago, a new president emerges, with hopes of helping to heal and reset the direction into the future. However, he has ties of his own to September 11th and wants to take one more form of action before closing the book on this part of US history. James Reece, former Navy SEAL, is summoned to meet with POTUS and play a key role in eradicating a handful of men on US soil who plotted the attacks, but remained in the shadows.

While Reece is working to help his Commander-in-Chief, there are those within the US who see Reece as a loose cannon that mist be stopped,. Violating many of the rules and laws of American espionage, there are some who will do whatever they can to see Reece brought to justice for his actions and possibly neutralised. Still, it will take more than tattling to get it done effectively.

All the while, a diplomatic pouch makes its way into the United States and ends up in the hands of a young man. What’s inside will surely prove deadly if it falls into the wrong hands. A bioweapon that few knew existed could be unleashed with devastating effect and send America into a state of panic once more. Carr delivers a story that could so readily happen, making it all the more impactful.

While I enjoy counter-terrorism and espionage stories, they can sometimes be far-fetched or a tad over the top. In all four novels that Jack Carr has penned, none of them have been implausible, which makes the writing all the more worthy of notice. The ideas are strong, easily relatable, and full of action, forcing the reader to wonder ‘what if’ and ‘when’, rather than rest peacefully, knowing it is all guaranteed fiction.

James Reece is a wonderful protagonist in this piece, offering up some stellar one liners when the time is right. His backstory is less prominent in the novel, though there are still some flashbacks to substantiate what he is doing. His grit and determination are like no other and left me eager to see what he would do next. He is job-focussed, but shows a slight vulnerability when needed, adding depth to his character at the right time.

Carr writes in such a way that the reader cannot tell where the fiction ends and reality begins. Not only is this the sign of a great writer, but there is an disturbing sense of what might be intermingled with plot lines that add to their story. The narrative inched its way forward effectively, never giving the reader a reprieve from the action. The plot evolved well and seemed to take on a life of its own at just the right time. Mixing politics with espionage, Carr keeps the reader on their toes and wondering how to handle what’s been put before them. While not my usual reading fare, I could not put it down and am pleased that I took the time to read the latest in this series. Jack Carr is at the top of his game and others within the genre ought to take notice.

Kudos, Mr. Carr, for another winner. Keep it up and you will surely have many more fans admitting your work.

Love/hate the review? An ever-growing collection of others appears at:
http://pecheyponderings.wordpress.com/

A Book for All Seasons, a different sort of Book Challenge: https://www.goodreads.com/group/show/...


SteVen Hendricks

Rating: really liked it
Book Review - I was extremely torn in writing this review but I have always tried to be honest and fair with all my reviews. This one was difficult! I loved all three of Jack Carr’s previous books but this one was way too over the top. Don’t get me wrong, “The Devil’s Hand” ‘overall’ was a really good story and Jack Carr has quickly become one of the best storytellers in the action thriller genre. But what really bothered me about this particular book was Carr’s constant disparaging comments and ‘right-wing’ political jabs throughout an otherwise well written and superbly researched story. Yes I know the book is a political action thriller and that Jack Carr is a Conservative, but this one was a little too much for a nonpartisan, moderate military brat who wants to be entertained when I read and not read the author’s personal political jabs whether I agree with them or not. This book felt like it was written in an effort to ‘own the Libs” and how one side of the political aisle handled the current pandemic. We get enough of that already from all the different broadcast media outlets and social media. Carr’s fourth installment felt less about James Reese and more about Carr’s personal political soap box. I love Jack Carr as an author, but I’m not a fan of the negative partisan politics, the ugly racial divide and the pandemic made into a political issue that has engulfed our country right now. I just wanted to read about James Reese kicking bad guys’ asses while being supported by his friends, colleagues and his country. Way too “in your face” with the far right-wing capital-C conservative politics for me this time. The story was really really good - Carr is extremely knowledgeable and an excellent researcher, but the storyline got lost in the mud with his personal politics. I’ve always appreciated those thriller authors who can write nonpartisan political action thrillers without bashing either side in their storytelling. Again, I read to be entertained, not preached to about personal political viewpoints. That’s just me - very middle of the road. Overall, I enjoyed the story...it was a good read other than Carr’s personal political views.


Julie Watson

Rating: really liked it
The time has come,the long awaited thriller is here - Jack Carr’s THE DEVIL’S HAND! And you will not be disappointed! If it could be possible, THE DEVIL’S HAND is a more intense, stunning, blow-to-the-gut read than TERMINAL LIST or SAVAGE SON, though it has elements of revenge and retribution. Its definite message should capture and hold your attention.

I have a background in virology/immunology and worked with some of the world’s leading researchers. I know what Marburg and hemorrhagic diseases are, their threat, and lethality. Most people assume a fiction novel is just that-fantasy. Most military/political thriller authors write REALITY, knowledge they have on a subject, event, and insert their protagonists into the situation.Thriller readers know more about hazardous world events because the top thriller authors today have addressed the dangers.

I apologize in advance for the longevity of this review, but THIS BOOK MERITS IT. You may be aware my reviews go beyond just relating briefly the storyline, I analyze and try to point out to readers significant pieces of factual information that may prove invaluable to them in the future. Items that apply to their own lives. This is especially true in this novel, that is NOT fantasy as the story plays out. I am appreciative of David Brown, Deputy Director, Publicity of Atria Books gifting me an ARC and to Emily Bestler, Editor in Chief for having the wisdom and foresight to immediately grasp and pull Jack Carr into the Atria Books family. And a sincere thank you to Brad Thor for discovering and mentoring Jack Carr.Fans are eternally grateful!

This is not the first novel on infectious disease, nor will it be the last. It is however the most significant one you will ever read.Brad Thor looked at hemorrhagic disease from Central Africa as a bioweapon some 7-8 yrs ago when Ebola first showed up in the West. Kyle Mills in LETHAL AGENT looked at a MERS type disease, like SARS, that emerged from Yemen as a bioweapon that was brought into the USA by the Mexican drug cartels. Mitch Rapp was left with how to stop it. Mathew Snyder in THE HIDDEN VECTOR looked at a weaponized Marburg disease.

Jack Carr addresses the Marburg Virus for what it is, the deadliest disease on the planet. It is a REAL virus that the Russians weaponized years ago. And now, you are asking yourself- how did James Reece get involved in biological warfare? Does he contract the disease like Mitch Rapp did from the MERS variant from Yemen?

You will see in THE DEVIL’S HAND how a multi-theme storyline is developed with each having a separate cast of characters that then become intertwined and move the protagonist to a stunning end. It is a brilliant piece of writing, carefully crafted, exacting in its execution of the storyline, leaving no loose ends to speak of. The book and its ending will leave you stunned, doing an OMG when you realize that Jack Carr is probably telling you in factual terms exactly how biowarfare control will be implemented with CONTAINMENT on domestic US soil.

I preface my opinion by stating I worked medical associations in DC for 3 decades and had exposure to the latest research in the field of virology/immunology while working in programs with some of the top researchers in the world. It was the time of AIDS, malaria, SARS, and the emergence of the hemorrhagic diseases such as Dengue Fever, Ebola, and Marburg. They strike quickly and deadly. It goes beyond high fevers, chills, headaches, aching muscles and pain. YOU BLEED FROM EVERY ORIFICE AS YOUR TISSUE DEGRADES. From your mouth, nose, eyes, ears, penis, anus, and vagina. The viral pathogens cause cellular and organ breakdown in the body. Everything turns to mush. It is a brutal way to die. It is a brutal way for a family member to watch you die. The virus is found in EVERY bodily fluid - saliva, tears, mucus, semen, urine, feces, blood.

That is the truth of hemorrhagic viruses. They are highly contagious and governments do everything in their power to contain these dangerous diseases. Sometimes, even the unthinkable.

When Ebola appeared in the US in 2014, the public got the point, deadly diseases are only a 24hr jet flight away from your doorstep. A vaccine for Ebola was developed after a fashion. But the research goes on. A virology researcher in Africa was recognized this past week for having developed a test that determines within 40 minutes if you have been exposed to any of a dozen different deadly viral diseases. I see it as coming to an international airport near you, the ones servicing overseas flights to the US and Europe. This is so important, if you test positive, then you don’t get on a plane. Period. I mention this because as of 3/31/21, there are some 86 individuals in quarantine in Ohio, Kentucky, Oregon, and Washington with exposure to Ebola from Guinea and the DRCongo.

Jack Carr writes a dynamic, absorbing, entertaining, jaw dropping tale, but the real importance is from what you will learn regarding the handling of hemorrhagic diseases in the US as a worse case scenario. Or any pandemic disease that may occur. So heed Jack’s subtle warning and pay careful attention. Ebola is in the here and now. Do not write this story off as fiction. It may be your future reality.

Jack Carr has a brilliant mind, like a diamond, so multi-faceted and knowledge in so many different areas, including medicine. He is not only a terrific sportsman, but has a handle on the world body politic and history, a keen understanding of how Washington DC operates, the Deep State if you will, and provides an analytical overview of how DC really operates,from the Club Aegis,which is a renaming of the Cosmos Club,just a block or two from the White House, and even Camp David.

When I lived in DC,the Cosmos Club was a male-only bastion where few women every graced their portals. It was also the most well known power broker in the city. An invite to dinner/drinks there meant “you had arrived.” Careers were made and destroyed in these political haunts.

I especially loved and appreciated the detailed synopsis of political and military decision-making as it pertained to the Middle East and elaborates, without embellishment, policy creation and legislation, or more precisely, Executive Orders that brought us to a 20 year ongoing war in the Middle East. It has brought to a head the insidious hatred of the United States that manifests itself with the never ending growth of jihadists, rising from the madras Islamic schools of the Middle East/Asia, to families seeking vengeance for their lost family members.These wars have not come to a conclusion in over 20 years. Is it time to alter, change the paradigm?

We have taken out the bin Ladens and the Soleimanis, but what has it changed?Just as we use intell to track, trace and study them, they are reciprocating.

Jack weaves an intricate geopolitical and historical lesson into the opening chapters of this book. He opens the actual plot of the novel in such a place as the Cosmos Club called Club Aegis where hatred of a political opponent has incited spying and plotting. The focus of the meeting? James Reece and why he met the President at Camp David. In many ways, this opening shot across the bow is reflective of what actually goes on in DC. Unless you lived there, many do not realize the bottom line is one of DC being very much like a small Southern town with secrets and everyone knows everyone else’s business. There is no such thing as a secret in DC. Not really, just unspoken ones. Exhibit A, what is unfolding now with the illustrious senator from Florida.

Reece’s meeting with POTUS seems to bring Reece full circle. Even the president seeks closure in the death of his fiancé in the fall of the towers from 9/11. His request, eliminate those final vestiges of the planning, financing, and execution of 9/11/2001. He asks it of the one man capable of understanding the excruciating pain of senseless loss and the motive for the request. It helps to know the President has his back with citing an Executive Order to prevent incarceration or worse if he is caught. Basically, Reece has been handed a “Get out of jail free” card. And it allows him to go after the assassin of Freddy Strain. James Reece responds with a “yes.”

Possibilities also open up in Reece’s life with ace reporter/investigator Katie Buranek who he has trained to kill to defend herself. James is determined to never lose a loved one again! Suffice to say,Carr has possibilities as a romance writer with delivery of the best line I’ve read in some time on the subject. James and Katie have just finished dinner and she invites him back to her apartment for dessert. He’s agreeable and asks what it is. Her response- “you’re looking at it.” Loved it!

Jack Carr also creates interesting villains to say the least. One, Erik Sawyer,a CEO of a special ops organization, Masada, who betrays his country; The other, Edward Thwaite, an August senator, out to capture a stolen presidency by cutting the legs out from under the current president and utilizes spying to do it. They see Reece as the angle to take the president down.

A long planned terrorist attack is unfolding, implemented and orchestrated by Hafez Qassem, of the Iranian Quds, and Chief of Iranian Intelligence in the United States. Cells are activated, long ago emigrated Iranians, virologists, are preparing weaponized Marburg. It is noted that James Reece was in the immediate vicinity when two of the “sleepers” are killed. The hunter soon becomes the hunted. An uptick in the planned event occurs. Assaults are launched to eliminate Reece and Katie. My girl has learned how to kick some ass! And an aging Russian virologist leads Qassem to the perfect plot to obliterate the USA, where a nation turns on itself.

Catastrophic disaster strikes American cities. Katie Buranek, and her CDC college friend,get drawn deeper into covert action to provide answers and a pivotal solution to prevent annihilation of Americans. The clock is ticking, it’s a race against time. Who lives and who dies? A situation not unlike a patient with a gangrenous leg occurs. Do you amputate, or do you wait, and hope for the best outcome with antibiotics. Apply the analogy.

Governmental actions are dictated by protocols established long ago. My opinion, I think they actually exist because there are no other options and the American public does not like taking orders. The attitude is it will never happen to THEM. Readers should start paying close attention at this juncture just in case they miss the case in point while enjoying this great adventure.

The only clue to unraveling this crisis is that two patients hospitalized with an unknown hemorrhagic disease, that is spreading to thousands of affected Americans,are also on the list that the President of the United States handed to James Reece.

This is NOT a book to pick up, start reading, and think you can set it down for later. With 500 pages, you will need at least 4 or 5 hours to finish the last half of the book. As I said, its plot is stunning, the response to the attack/threat is an OMG moment, reading it is a non-stop adrenaline-pumping rush of elevated blood pressure. The fights are gory and you better have a strong stomach if you are good at visualization. You really do question whether there is a solution other than the one posed by the military. And you need to learn the lessons being taught.

Jack Carr established himself as a contender with staying power, at the pinnacle of top thriller writers, with SAVAGE SON. I didn’t think he could outdo himself in astonishing, breath-taking, intense action in a novel. I was wrong. THE DEVIL’S HAND takes it a step beyond. Several steps beyond. The novel is stunning, not just for the implications relating to such events, which I believe are true. It is a stunning novel for its development of intertwining plots and character development.It leads the readers to where they really do not want to go but must. It may give some nightmares or PTSD flashbacks, so be forewarned.

This book, THE DEVIL’S HAND, establishes Jack as a top writer for the century in my opinion. Not only in the craftsmanship displayed in his writing, but his examination of the darker, savage side of man, a kind of man who knows the job may be distasteful, but has to be done. He portrays scenarios that the average man never considered or believes will never happen. And he truthfully lays it out how he believes the government, the military would handle such a catastrophic medical disaster. Knowing what I do about virology from long ago, I think he is correct in his assessment. Some may think the book audacious. I think he nailed it!

THE DEVIL’S HAND will place, or should place Jack Carr as winner of THRILLER OF THE YEAR AWARD.The book will be the one that all others will have to beat. After reading it, don’t be discouraged authors, he has spent the past 35 years thinking, dreaming up plots such as this. His 20+years of experience as a Navy SEAL has made him an expert in envisioning such a plot. Jack’s literary works will be dissected by university literature courses in the years to come. Few others can match him for intensity, plot and character development, jaw-dropping action, and a breath-taking finish. Or lessons in reality.

THE DEVIL’S HAND is a magnificent, SUPERB, work of literary art. Take a moment to be appreciative of this man’s skill in crafting a story. Also take to heart the lessons of government, policy decision making, and facets of modern warfare that he is teaching you. I wish I could rate it higher, I give it a 10+*. I don’t know how he can improve on the next novel, but I sure hope he continues with the James Reece saga, and strives to best his other novels with the next one. A stunning work of artistry in so many ways.

Congratulations,Jack, I’m so glad I pre-ordered the hard copy too. FANS, Be glad you got your copy already. I reread this book three times.This is a book that will be selling out immediately. It should put Jack Carr at the top of the best sellers list for at least the next 5-6 months. My advice, Atria Books had better place NOW an order for second printing!


Cory L

Rating: really liked it
The story might actually be interesting if Jack Carr wasn’t such a terrible writer. The first book was enjoyable to read and I was able to overlook his flaws. The second book was a significant step down, but not completely awful. The third book was just plain bad and the characters just made me roll my eyes every time we heard about the Hastings and their perfect, rich family.

I decided to give this one a go but I set my expectations low. My god what a mistake that was. Jack Carr has managed to turn this series into his own Q anon fan fiction with his own meta commentary on the current state of the world and conspiracy theories regarding Covid. It’s just so off putting and unnecessary and I couldn’t stop rolling my eyes. I’m done with this series.


Abibliofob

Rating: really liked it
James Reece is back in The Devil's Hand by Jack Carr. Great book and a great way to deal with the pandemic. I first read about Marburg virus in a book by Tom Clancy some years ago and this is another great work of fiction with a new twist on the subject. The characters are as usual well written and I really like the attention to details and equipment in this series. I also find it entertaining when a podcast or book is mentioned where the reader can get to know the author better is mentioned. I also like it when we get a list of things that has been a part of the research behind a book and I don't think I ever saw such a long list in a work of fiction before.


Josh Olds

Rating: really liked it
This is one of those reviews where, if I’d done a bit more research, I probably would have learned enough from the context to know to pass on the book. The Devil’s Hand is the fourth novel from Jack Carr, a former SEAL sniper who has used his knowledge of warfare to bring gritty realism to his novels. The Terminal List, Carr’s debut novel, is now a series on Amazon starring Chris Pratt so whatever I think about the novel—it hardly matters. This type of book has an audience and they’re eating it up.

Our protagonist is former Navy SEAL James Reece. Reece is no longer with the military due to…things (read books 1-3). In The Devil’s Hand, he gets called in by none other than the President himself to do a little revenge. The President’s fiancée died in 9/11 and the sole driving force of his political career seems to be geared toward exacting revenge on those who were involved and got away. To this end, he calls Reece. Reece works outside the lines, outside the law, and will do anything to accomplish his mission. It’s a gleeful combination of violence, patriotism, and lawbreaking in the name of the alleged greater good that should be disturbing.

I don’t know that I like former Navy SEALs writing fiction about Navy SEALS who do war crimes. I’ll leave it at that. I’m a pacifist by conviction, but I do enjoy a good fictional action thriller. Thought I’d give Carr a shot and well—other authors have commended his accuracy and realism and if that’s true, I redouble my commitment to pacifism.

The focus on 9/11 and the glorification of violence and death is almost to the point of parody. Carr waxes eloquent about how the men who signed up to fight after the Towers were the kind of men who knew where to sit at on airplanes to best protect others. It’s a weird, violent patriotism that puts on some major rose-colored glasses and idealizes The War on Terror while yet seeming almost gleeful that there are more terrorists to kill.

Plot and character development take a back seat to action, preferably violent. Carr attempts to organically weave in the past storylines, but to middling effect. I ended up reading a bunch of reviews of books 1-3 in order to understand where we got to book 4. Usually thrillers like this are able to function as a standalone. I wouldn’t say this is the case for The Devil’s Hand.

What plot there is—The President hires a mercenary—is so over-the-top that it makes Chuck Norris films look realistic. But I guess that’s what this is. It’s an 80s action movie in 2020s clothing. It has its place, I guess, but I’d rather just go read Rambo again.


Jeramie Edwards

Rating: really liked it
The way Jack Carr weaves history and fiction is a thing of beauty, James Reece is a man on a mission in “the Devils Hand”. This one puts Reece in the conversation with Harvath and Rapp as the best in the genre (if he already wasn’t) the action is riveting! I couldn’t put the book down, I HAD to see what happens next! Carr has continued to up his game with every novel and “the devils hand” is no exception, it was fun seeing old characters and meeting new ones that I hope will stick around for a while. I’m already chomping at the bit for what comes next! The devils hand is a MUST read for thriller fans!!


Scott A. Miller

Rating: really liked it
Probably the best Reese book yet. Also something of a history lesson. Carr is great. I really am looking forward to the Reese TV series.

The timely reminder here is that there is much worse out there than COVID 19. Can we trust our government to protect us? Are there corrupt politicians at the highest level willing to sell us, or even kill us just for power? Read this and see what you think.

If that doesn’t scare the shit out of you, it will certainly be one hell of a thriller. This was the perfect final book for 2021.


Henry

Rating: really liked it
Number 4 in the Terminal List series and by far the best since the first installment in the series (Terminal List).


Micah

Rating: really liked it
Jack Carr lives, as do we all, in the shadow of the master: Tom Clancy.

He puts a twist on the formula:

Yes, he describes how things work, guns, bombs, diseases. Yes, he writes complicated technothrillers. Yes, he is a conservative. Yes he is , yes he is.

But he is also a sponsored social media tacticool influencer. His resume is his sales pitch. Ex-Navy SEAL. Sniper. Big game hunter. Land Rover owner. Middle aged white man. Father, Husband, Patriot, Son. The tier one beard and EDC hatchet are his calling cards. He's not a businessman he's a Business, man. He writes books with the vibe of a Highsnobiety dot com style guide – a shopping list of lifestyle brands and high speed/low drag equipment manufacturers – vertically integrated into the retail ecosystem of the discerning upper middle class right wing consumer. The target audiences for his art are people who like action, sure, and people who like the military and people who like capital C conservative politics (though not necessarily the Republican politicians who embody those politics). But those audiences are secondary.

Jack Carr writes books first and foremost for the type of guy who self describes as a "gear guy". I love it.

Tom Clancy captured the wallets of 80's America by writing dad-vibe violence fic for the spec sheet nerds and Janes Guide owners in all of us. Jack Carr found his niche appealing to our inner r/gunporn reddit posters.

Having done his revenge-as-origin-story take on Without Remorse (The Terminal List, soon to be a prestige Amazon Web Series) Jack now does what is essentially a stripped down remake of Clancy's encyclopedic late period magnum opus: Executive Orders. A driven president. A country recovering from disaster. Ebola. Iran. Emergency powers and contact tracing. Domestic unrest and military maneuvers. Carr seems to operate at his peak when he's inspired: his extended fourth act homage to The Most Dangerous Game in the last installment of his James Reece series, Savage Son, was at the time the best thing he'd written yet.

The Terminal List, and its heavily Clancy indebted sequel True Believer, both sucked. But Carr has been getting better at writing this sort of book. Savage Son turned some sort of corner. It wasn't bad. The Devil's Hand is better.

As is increasingly the case with James Reece novels, Carr starts the book slow. Clancy again: He seems eager to lose track of the plot early in a tangle of minor characters, historical context, digressive subplots, and technical infodumps. Big chunks of the book early and late are given over to extended blog-post political manifestos.

This is where Carr leaves his elders behind.

Despite the fact that he is essentially biting an entire book off the guy who made the right wing technothriller a thing, this is where you gotta given Carr credit. He innovates into the contemporary.

Jack Carr writes books for today.

The world of The Devil's Hand is hyper-current. America has just recovered from Covid-19. We are still shaken by the Trump presidency. Antifa gets co-billing with the Ayatollahs. The politics of the Nineties are insufficient to the moment, so there are no lengthy speeches by Jack Ryan, no discussions of tax policy or cold war realpolitik. There is some constitutional lawyering – the founding document is God's gospel after all – but it feels perfunctory, which is, I guess, realism.

That violence was always gonna happen, man. Principle is relative to process. Legality is a veneer on the inevitable.

You see, unlike Clancy's stodgy Reagan Era conservatism, Carr is a libertarian neo-populist sort. He likes cops, but also likes the second amendment and his god given right to Not Be Bothered. He likes the military and spies but he hates surveillance and corrupt bureaucracy. He agrees with Republican Party policy but despises Republican Party politicians. He can't square the circle between his love of the enforcers of authoritarianism and his desire for autonomy so he becomes reductive. He knows to many facts about history and politics to be idealistic, but his ideology requires a measure of naivete to smooth over its internal inconsistencies.

A major subplot of the book is explicitly staged like one of those Federalist articles that purport to be advice from a conservative to liberals: "This is how you win, be exactly like me but nicer." I don't know whether it was sincere, I can't tell. It reads like wish fulfillment. What if there was a democrat who didn't care about culture war stuff? What if he liked the troops and tax breaks? What if, in addition to social security and limited Medicare expansion, he was also into assassination? Modern problems require modern solutions.

These sections are the thematic spine of the novel, but they drag.

Carr makes up for it though. While the ending is anticlimactic, last half of The Devil's Hand moves like a freight train – gun fights on gunfights on knife fights on riots – featuring several of the striking images that Carr has become an expert at conjuring (perhaps the best one: A guy in a hazmat suit with a Sig pistol walks up an empty suburban street – fluttering curtains, fast food wrappers rolling across the asphalt like tumbleweeds – a gunfighter going to war with the plague itself).

Carr shines with the action: He loves to stage a fight from multiple perspectives, splitting up the beats across time and replaying them. This time in slow motion. This time over night vision. This time in a mission debrief. He revels in the description of violence (this book has the genre requisite insanely brutal torture sequence, and boy is it a thing that i absolutely read, yessir!) He likes to describe a tactic and then show his characters using it later. He likes to reference things you've heard before:

"get off the x"

"slow is smooth smooth is fast"

"tap, rack, bang, clear"

Has Garand Thumb said it? Lukas Botkin? Marcus Lutrell? Was it in a Clint Smith rant or a John Lovett soliloquy? Odds are a character will think it as they kill. A thrill for those of us who spend too much time on guntube.

Which is kinda how the whole book works. Its specifically for people in a demographic. If you know you know. You might not like the whole thing, you will see its flaws and you will roll your eyes, maybe, at its excesses. But its for you. You asked for this. It's fast food, it's crack. It's a scratched itch; you will be satisfied.

I love this shit.

If you don't know... well, it's in the lineage of Clancy after all: wait for the TV show.


Aniruddha M

Rating: really liked it
Ex Navy-Seal James Reece is on a three pronged mission - locate and terminate some 9/11 plotters, find and stop a Bio Weapon in US and his family's killer has to be located and terminated.
Written with great authority and inside knowledge, this is a revenge laced tale full of torture and violence, quite well presented!
Do visit and read my detailed review from the link below

https://www.aniblogshere.com/books-re...


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Todd Wilkins

Rating: really liked it
READ MY FULL REVIEW AT Best Thriller Books

If there is one thing that fans have come to expect from any Jack Carr book it is violence of action. The intense brutality that James Reece brings down upon his enemies is second to none in the genre.

Make sure to check out the full review


MitchRappPod No Limits

Rating: really liked it
Well, I guess you could say that my thoughts on Jack Carr can best be summed up in the form of a limerick:

A warrior, a husband, a father, a SEAL.
James Reece or Jack Carr doth this reveal?
A man on a mission,
Surpassing competition,
To every thriller reader, his works surely appeal.

If you haven't picked up the James Reece series, do so IMMEDIATELY! You can listen to our interview with Jack Carr on Ep.51 of No Limits: The Mitch Rapp Podcast at https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast...