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The Blood Price by Jon Evans
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The Blood Price

by Jon Evans

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Exciting story. But I especially like this book for its account of the Burning Man Festival, and the way various characters related to the festival in very different ways.
I am also intrigued to find out more about this author, since he comes from my home town... ( )
  klg | Oct 5, 2008 |
In this book Paul Wood finds himself traveling in Sarajevo with his girlfriend when they meet up with her old high school buddy, now a battered wife in a relationship with brutal man. In order to get her out of the country they team up with smugglers, and so it begins.

Like Evans' first book, Dark Places, the characters are given pleasantly realistic reactions. When they are approached by gangs they don't yell "Yippee-kay-yay" and fly through the air with guns blazing, they run. Paul Wood thinks twice, thrice, many times about how to deal with the war criminals/drug smugglers/etc. When he hurts, he hurts, and he doesn't do a double-lux flying kick immediately after being punched.

In general it's an entertaining quick read, but I didn't enjoy it quite as much as the first. Paul spends most of the first half in self-pity, afraid to lose his girlfriend because he's become a lazy jobless bum (due to the dotcom crash). He whines and accuses and generally is pitiable, which doesn't lend much charisma to his character. In the end, there is something else that made me uneasy. In Dark Places a group of friends team up to kill one serial murderer who was out to kill them. Blood Price involves killing several characters, one of whom was made more or less agreeable early on. Our heroes agree that simply killing them in their sleep is uncool, but apparently blowing them out of the sky as they lift off in a helicopter is perfectly fine. Given the right means, the end didn't really give them a second thought.

Adventure/spy/mystery novels generally don't worry too much about the consequences. Like any summer blockbuster, they don't spend too much time counting bodies. But Evans goes to such a great extent to make our heroes real, that I end up holding them to a higher moral standard than James Bond. It bugs me that they can kill and drink beer afterward, even when the dead were already established as evil murderous drug runners. It probably shouldn't bother me given the genre, and indeed this book still had a lot of entertaining chase scenes which add an exciting edge. I'll pick up his next book Invisible Armies sometime, but I won't set my bar too high. ( )
  myfanwy | Oct 2, 2007 |
This adult book is a great James Bond-type novel.

Encountering a desperate woman while visiting Sarajevo, Paul Wood and his girlfriend, Talena, become unwitting agents of the woman's escape from a web of criminals, warlords, and would-be peacekeepers; an effort that forces Paul to do a smuggling job in exchange for safe passage. ( )
  sarahthelibrarian | Nov 28, 2006 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0060782366, Paperback)

Paul Wood and his girlfriend, Talena, were just tourists in Sarajevo, a city still reeling from the aftermath of civil war. But an unexpected encounter makes them a desperate woman's only hope of escape. Now, to get her to safety, they must navigate through the minefield of warlords, criminals, and peacekeepers that is postwar Bosnia.

Pursued by brutal gangsters and unable to leave the country legally, Paul agrees to do a job for a shadowy group of people smugglers in exchange for safe passage. The smugglers seem friendly. The job seems harmless. But when he discovers the secrets seething beneath, the repercussions will propel him on a perilous journey around the world -- from a warlord's compound in lawless Albania, through the jungles of Latin America, and toward an explosive confrontation at the extraordinary Burning Man festival in the Nevada desert.

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 07 Jan 2010 21:10:34 -0500)

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