Silversword
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4.0 • 2 Ratings
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- $12.99
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
In this thrilling fourth installment of the John Caine series, our indestructible hero faces his toughest challenges yet – a gunshot wound, a murder charge, and a race against time to save a young scientist's discovery.
Far from his beloved Hawaii, John Caine finds himself protecting his friend Chawlie, a Honolulu gangster, at the funeral of a rival Triad leader in San Francisco. When a shootout erupts, Caine keeps Chawlie and his son safe but takes a bullet in the back. His reward? A long hospital stay and the suspicion of a determined female detective who believes Caine is her prime suspect in a murder case.
Back in Waikiki to recuperate, Caine is presented with a new case by his old friend, Hawaiian Police Chief Kimo. Silversword's Donna Wong, a young scientist, has made a groundbreaking discovery beneath the Pacific waves that could rewrite Hawaiian history, but her unscrupulous faculty advisor plans to steal it. Can Caine uncover the man's past misdeeds?
With the California detective hot on his heels, Caine learns his friend faces charges of extortion, kidnapping, and murder. To make matters worse, an imminent volcanic eruption threatens Wong's discovery site. Despite his weakened state, Caine must race against time to clear his name, save his friend, and protect the young scientist's work. Another group of bad guys is about to learn the hard way: never count John Caine out, no matter the odds.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
PI John Caine's fourth adventure opens promisingly with a wild street shootout at a Triad funeral in San Francisco, but the brakes are stomped when the Vietnam-era Navy SEAL catches a round in his back and the medics take over. Many chapters of rest and rumination follow. All Caine wants to do is get back to his sailboat, berthed in Pearl Harbor, and heal his wounds, but a female cop charges him with murder for the death of an innocent bystander at the melee. The body counts racked up in his previous exploits, plus the new incident, may have given Caine a reservation at the gray bar hotel. Against this fairly realistic handling of legal maneuvering and recovery (including the realization that he experienced life-altering post-traumatic stress disorder after Nam) hovers the shadowy question of who ordered the sniper to open fire. Knief (Diamond Head; Sand Dollars; Emerald Flash) also offers his weakened hero a superbly romantic case back in Hawaii: the discovery of the underwater tomb of the legendary King Kamehameha, filled with treasure from a wrecked Spanish galleon (which proves the islands were visited before Cook) all threatened by a newly erupting volcano. These plot lines never quite mesh but Knief keeps everything moving so that many readers may never notice though fans of the sensitive warrior sub-genre might experience a vague wish for a little less sensitive and a lot more warrior before reaching the last page.