Do You like author Nelson DeMille?
Hell of a story teller. 'Up Country' taught me more about the Vietnam than anyone would want to know.
—Ken Messenger
Another De Mille book. I've not read these in any sequence therefore, John Corey and his Wife are in another pickle with a past foe Asad Kahlil, terrorist supreme, avid killer, and psychopath. Lots of people are dying, killed in many gruesome ways; shooting them being the less gruesome. I woul...
Book #6 in the John Corey Series, a direct sequel to The Lion, takes place in Yemen; pub. 2012. The plot is tissue paper thin, bloated, mostly predictable and, except for the last 60-70 pages, seriously lacking in action and suspense. The object is for John Corey and his wife Kate Mayfield to h...
Parts of the story were drawn out and then the ending was rushed.Khalil Asad returns to New York to finish what he started 3 years ago. He kills everyone he meets and attempts to kill Kate Mayfield, John Corey's wife. She recovers and John is under protection of the FBI and the ATTF. The whole...
Just what the doctor ordered to counterbalance the page-long descriptions and meticulous details in the detective story (by a different author) I read previously. I gobbled this gem up in one sitting last night. One can never go wrong with detective John Corey's sarcastic, deadpan approach to sol...
Nelson DeMille is probably my 3rd or 4th favorite author. I've read 5 of his books and have enjoyed them all.I picked up 'The Panther' with high expectations. My expectations were not only met but far surpassed.What can I say? He is the master. He tells great compelling stories. The Panther has n...
I read a page of this book on someone else’s Kindle on a flight a few weeks ago and was intrigued enough by the premise that I bought and read it fairly quickly. Ultimately, that intriguing premise is all the book has to offer, unless you read a book for unfunny dialogue, a grating protagonist, a...
This was a a really good story, but it lost a star for being first person which really jars me off and the badly written romantic element. I doubt this will be for everyone,The violent and sexual scenes are not written gratuitously but they don't need to be, they provide a chilling enough pictur...
Second in the John Corey suspense series revolving around a former NYPD detective. This story takes place before the Twin Towers and after the World Trade Center bombing and TWA 800.My TakeThis one was depressing. Oh, Corey is just as snarky as ever...thank god. I do enjoy his brand of humor. You...
Author.. Nelson Demille..Characters.. Frank Bellarosa, John Sutter, Susan Sutter, Anna, George, Ethel, William Stanhope,Location.. Lattingtown, Long Island, New York..( Stanhope hall and Alhambra)Genre.. Family drama...PLOT.. John Sutter,.. a wall street lawyer,cheerleader of law an...
This is some of the best disaster fiction out there. At first, it seems to follow the basic pattern of such novels: there's some sort of disaster, and a few people are randomly picked to survive, and have to find a way to get back home. Mayday, however, deviated from this basic formula. The plot ...
John Corey is my favorite Nelson DeMille character but I think this may be my new favorite book of his. By The Rivers Of Babylon is amazing, an adventure story that also acts as a meditation on war and peace, a glimpse into battle strategy, a rumination on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict (and ot...
The last Demille book I had read was THE LION. And, I couldn’t wait to get it off my back. It was that bad. So, it was with great reluctance that I picked up the WORD OF HONOR. Reluctance because it was written by Demille, and THE LION was still chasing me. And, secondly the book was blurb-ed as ...
First in the John Corey suspense series revolving around a cop in New York City convalescing from bullet wounds. Although, the story actually takes place in Long Island.My TakeOh my god. I swear, if you look up "snark" in the dictionary, you'll find John Corey's picture. He is so incredibly funny...
* One of the last Cold War novels of the Cold War period. Published in 1988, the book, with its POW/MIA theme--and its setting in a mighty USSR--is situated more comfortably in the decade of Rambo than in the political reality of the late eighties/early nineties. In '89, the Berlin Wall came do...
There was a story about novelist and Vietnam veteran Nelson DeMille in a recent issue of American Legion magazine. I was struck by the similarity between his Vietnam tour and my first one: to the 1st Cavalry Division in November 1967, battles in Bong Son, then north to Quang Tri for Tet, the reli...
Nelson Demille arrived on my favorite authors list after reading The Gatehouse, so I was anxious to read another selection and found Spencerville in the library.Keith Landry finds himself without a job after budget cuts in the federal government force him to review his life and decide what comes ...
I'm a huge DeMille fan, but only thought this one was okay. It started off really jumbled, meaning, a lot of characters got introduced relatively quickly, and a lot of the "spy talk" and double talk made the intent sort of hard to grasp. Although, as you keep reading everything gets easier to und...
Hell of a story teller. 'Up Country' taught me more about the Vietnam than anyone would want to know.
—Ken Messenger