Seven Demons
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- 39,00 kr
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- 39,00 kr
Publisher Description
Jack Price and his Seven Demons, the most dangerous and feared assassins in the world, are taking on the bank heist of the century.
Meet Jack Price and the Seven Demons: Doc, the evil mad scientist presently using Jack for sex; Rex, an explosives expert who doesn’t ask too many questions so long as something goes boom; Volodya, a Ukrainian assassin who may or may not be a cannibal; Charlie, a comic book artist with computer skills and an anarchist bent; Lucille, whose specialty is razor-edged hugs; and Jack’s predecessor, Fred, who doesn’t contribute a whole lot owing to being a severed head on a stick. Finally there’s Jack himself, former coffee magnate turned cocaine dealer turned First Demon, but basically just a guy trying to get along.
Jack has a problem. The Seven Demons don’t have a contract, and there’s nothing more volatile than a gang of deadly killers with nothing to do. Luckily, a shadowy Eurotrash businessman wants them to pull off the heist of a lifetime, breaking into a bank that makes Fort Knox look like the corner candy store. Jack thinks this will be a nice little diversion for his crew . . . until a rosy-cheeked, lederhosen-wearing little psychopath named Evil Hansel stabs him with an oyster knife, and the whole situation goes completely to hell. Someone isn’t playing straight, and in a game of double crosses, Jack Price will do anything—literally, anything—to come out on top
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Truhen's rambling sequel to 2018's The Price You Pay opens with Jack Price, "CEO of a global criminal enterprise with deep roots in the community and a justified reputation for unparalleled savagery," in Switzerland, where a nine-year-old he's dubbed Evil Hansel has just stabbed him in the leg. The author takes his time explaining what led to this act of violence as he introduces Price's crew, which includes the Doc, "who basically is walking science with whom I am in a Nietzschean and highly charged sexual relationship," and Lucille, "a large guy wearing a suit made of sharp edges." Price is retained by someone he calls Mr. Client to rob a supposedly invulnerable Swiss bank. Mr. Client desires 10 metal suitcases secured inside the vault, successfully tempting Price with a €300 million payday. As the start telegraphs, the crime doesn't go as planned. The plot is almost lost amid such odd references as rabbit "fearboners" and run-on sentences. A large appetite for violent absurdity is required.