The Protectors
A Thriller
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- $4.99
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- $4.99
Publisher Description
An enthralling debut, The Protectors offers a dark twist on the classic superhero story as fallen hero Scott McAlister embarks on a globe-hopping chase to stop his former teammate—and ex-lover—gone rogue.
Don’t call him a superhero.
Heroes change the world. Scott McAlister? On a good day, he manages to change out of sweatpants.
It wasn’t always like this. Scott used to be leader of the Protectors, the world’s one and only squad of superheroes. It was a decent gig, but far from the shiny force for good the UN advertised. He could abide the publicity stunts, the lies, the ham-fisted government handlers—but when one of the Protectors died under his command, it was too much. Wracked with guilt, Scott stepped down and into an early retirement.
Now, five years later, a desperate CIA chief shows up on Scott’s doorstep with a polite request and a cadre of shock troops to ensure that Scott accepts. His ex-teammate and ex-lover, Lyla Ravzi, has gone rogue. The former Protector has the ability to control minds, and she’s no longer interested in “protecting.” She wants world domination.
Scott’s mission is simple: Find Lyla and stop her. The messy little details are up to him. It’s the last thing Scott needs after five years spent trying to forget the Protectors and to get over Lyla, but the alternative is worse.
As he closes in on his target, Scott is forced to confront his past and face a chilling reality: Can he save the world and the woman he once loved? Or will he have to choose?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Dowell tries and fails to make hay from the familiar theme of aging super-heroes coming out of retirement. Scott McAlister, aka Knockout, can instantly put people to sleep. Knockout was once part of a "team of heroes ready to protect the planet" that included seductive Aphrodite (Knockout's former love interest, of course, though whether that was by choice or by compulsion isn't obvious) and electricity-harnessing Blaster. When Aphrodite goes rogue and "embraces" Kim Jong-un, leading him to suspend North Korea's nuclear program, the CIA yanks Knockout out of retirement and sends him after her. Will he bring her in, or will he join her on her next campaign liberating her native Iran from the autocratic mullahs? In the right hands, this could have been an entertaining story, but Dowell awkwardly alternates between cartoonish characterization and serious skullduggery, leaving it unclear whether he's trying to channel Stan Lee or John le Carr . Readers would be better off with either.