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Game of snipers

When Bob Lee Swagger is approached by a woman who lost a son to war and has spent the years since risking all that she has to find the sniper who pulled the trigger, he knows right away he'll do everything in his power to help her. But what begins as a favor becomes an obsession, and soon Swagger is back in the action, teaming up with the Mossad, the FBI, and local American law enforcement as he tracks a sniper who is his own equal... and attempts to decipher that assassin's ultimate target before it's too late.

Book  - 2019
FIC Hunte
1 copy / 0 on hold

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  • ISBN: 9780399574573
  • Physical Description 387 pages ; 24 cm.
  • Publisher [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified], 2019.

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Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 9780399574573
Game of Snipers
Game of Snipers
by Hunter, Stephen
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Publishers Weekly Review

Game of Snipers

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Early in bestseller Hunter's stellar 12th Bob Lee Swagger novel (after 2017's G-Man), a stranger, Janet McDowell, shows up at Bob's Idaho ranch and asks him for help tracking down the sniper who fatally shot her Marine son, Lance Cpl. Thomas McDowell, in Baghdad in 2003. Janet has spent the past 15 years following the trail of the man she knows killed Tom, a mercenary known as Juba the Sniper. After accepting the mission, Bob consults the Israelis, who tell him that the Syrian-born Juba "is a cold brute, utterly committed and sublimely talented." After the Mossad learns that Juba is headed for America with plans to shoot a "high value target from a long way away," Bob goes to the FBI, and a co-FBI/Mossad task force is assembled. A riveting chase ensues in which Juba manages to stay one step ahead of Bob and his team with multiple hairbreadth escapes. Some readers may find the gun lore too intensive, but Hunter can make even a lengthy discourse on a single round of ammunition fascinating. Put this one on the shelf next to The Day of the Jackal. It's that good. Author tour. Agent: Esther Newberg, Curtis Brown. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 9780399574573
Game of Snipers
Game of Snipers
by Hunter, Stephen
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Kirkus Review

Game of Snipers

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

A storied marksman meets his equal in the 11th installment of Hunter's Bob Lee Swagger series (G-Man, 2017, etc.).Seventy-two-year-old retired sniper Bob Lee Swagger watches the prairie from his rocking chair in Idaho, neither expecting nor wanting to see anyone. But Janet McDowell shows up, saying that her son was shot by a sniper in Baghdad and that she had gone to extraordinary, fruitless trouble trying to exact vengeance on Juba the Sniper, who has killed hundreds of Americans. Swagger agrees to hunt the man downhey, it'll be more interesting than hanging out at Cracker Barrel. Meanwhile, Juba dreams of killing Marines"The world was a kill box. His finger spoke for God." Soon Swagger is in Tel Aviv, chatting with the Mossad. They want Juba, too, but they want him alive "to have a series of chats with him." Swagger would like to feed Juba's face to the pigs, but "Alas," he's told, "we're a little Jewish country. No pigs." Scenes with Juba show off his bloodthirsty sidewait, that's his only side, for which he routinely gives thanks. This chap is a fascinating one-dimensional villain, crediting his bloodlust to God. Then U.S. intelligence learns that Juba is coming to America to kill a high-value target from a long-distance shot, so Swagger returns home. There's more than enough detail in this story about hollow point shells, muzzle velocities, and precision kills from over a mile away to make Second Amendment worshipers quiver jellolike with excitement. As the title suggests, Swagger and Juba are inevitably in for a showdown, not a little chat, and it's going to be spectacular. The author is a Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic who knows how to tell a crackling good story.Fast-moving, violent, and entertaining, this is genuine good-guy-versus-bad-guy stuff. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.