Last fall I listened to The Gray Man, the first book in Mark Greaney’s series which was adapted into the recent Netflix movie. As is my tendency, with the change of the seasons I felt inclined to return the series for the second installment, On Target. I don’t know why I’m like this, but I usually want to revisit familiar things when the weather reminds me of them. This desire goes far beyond wanting Christmas movies in December and follows me year round.
Anyway, I digress.
At the end of The Gray Man, professional killer Court Gentry (aka: Sierra Six) is still on the outs with the CIA and has burned bridges with his old handler. Rather than take a nice office job, he continues his work as a paid assassin. But it’s not easy finding decent people to kill for. On top of that, Gentry has developed something of an addiction to painkillers after the punishment he took in the last story.
The novels are not the colorful comic book mayhem of the movie.
Sure, Gentry is practically superhuman in his ingenuity and resilience. He’s basically Batman without the hangups about killing, and the globe is his Gotham City. But unlike the movie, we only see the ugly side of the places he visits, and the pain he feels is real. I don’t normally go in for stories that are so bleak, but Greaney stops just shy of making his novels ugly and his hero irredeemable.
There’s a little humor too.
In this go-round Gentry is tasked by the Russians to kill the president of Sudan, but before he gets started a former CIA commander he thought was dead offers him a better deal: kidnap the Sudanese president and instead of a paycheck he can get back on the government payroll. It’s a more difficult task and the short-term reward isn’t as good. But in the long run it would get the target off his back.
Of course, nothing goes according to plan.
I see plenty of negative reviews complaining how the dialog is sophomoric and the plot paper thin. Maybe on the page, actually studying the words, it’s an issue. Listening to it while mowing the lawn, though, I didn’t have any problems with Greaney’s prose. Slam-bang action and macho nonsense are easily digestible when you’re doing something else, which I was. Some books you meditate on, others you consume. This is the latter.
The story ends with another cliffhanger. Because of course it does.
Audible recently had books four and five on a two-for-one deal, so I added them to my library. Once I get book three I probably won’t wait until next fall to dig in.