The Kill List
A Terrorism Thriller
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- $8.99
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
An extraordinary cutting-edge suspense novel from the "king of the pack" (The Washington Times), #1 New York Times bestselling author Frederick Forsyth.
In northern Virginia, a secret agency named TOSA (Technical Operations Support Activity) has one mission: to track, find, and kill those so dangerous to the United States that they are on a short, very close-held document known as the Kill List.
Now a new name has been added: a terrorist of frightening effectiveness called the Preacher, who radicalizes young Muslims living abroad to carry out assassinations. Unfortunately for him, one of his targets is a retired Marine general, whose son is TOSA’s top tracker of men.
The Preacher has made it personal—and now the hunt is on….
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This subpar war-on-terror thriller from Diamond Dagger Award winner Forsyth, with its unknowable outcome, offers less suspense than his Edgar-winning debut, The Day of the Jackal, where the ending is never in doubt. A Muslim extremist, known only as the Preacher, is spreading the message of violent jihad via English-language videos, and his acolytes have begun targeting public officials in the U.S. and the U.K. The job of stopping him falls to Kit Carson, an ex-Marine now part of a super-secret agency in Virginia called Technical Operations Support Activity. Carson, who's known as the Tracker, assembles an assortment of allies straight out of a Mission Impossible script, including a reclusive teenager who's a master hacker employed to trace the Preacher. Some readers will wonder why Forsyth bothered to give Carson a personal incentive to complete the mission. Others will find a lack of memorable characters an obstacle to genuine engagement.
Customer Reviews
Entertaining
Easy read that is topical, current and containing elements of reality. This book, a comfortable chair and some quite time to read, all equal time well spent.
Ok
Ok. Book
10 stars
I wish I could give this book ten stars. It was perfect from the first sentence to the last. I can’t believe he never actually did what was written here.
Forsyth is too much.