Crisis Four (Nick Stone #2)
Andy McNab
For all McNab's authentic detail--we get lots of information on how to kill people and survive attacks--reading Crisis Four is a bit like playing Tombraider on the computer. It's a compelling other world, where reality is only paid lip service to, but the action comes so thick and fast that you can't help turning the page. And this is what marks Crisis Four as a cut above the average thriller. It is an unashamedly blokeish book--you won't find much in the way of subtlety of characterisation--though compared to Dick Francis McNab is positively Henry James--and you have to put up with the odd few pages that read more like instruction manuals for military hardware than narrative, but these are relatively minor quibbles. So many times you get to the end of a thriller only to wonder why on earth you bothered; Crisis Four delivers on its promises. --John Crace
Tagged as:
- thriller 4
- action / adventure 3
- espionage 3
- war/big battles 3
- military 2
- suspense 2
- mystery 2
- crime 2
- horror 1
- political intrigue 1
- military, war & conflict 1
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- format - reader age
- audiobook 2
- book 1
- adult fiction 1