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Revolution #9 by Peter Abrahams — book cover

Revolution #9

by Peter Abrahams
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Overview

Blake Wrightman died during the Vietnam War. Not on a Southeast Asian battlefield, but on an American college campus. He died the day the bomb he planted at an anti-war protest claimed a small boy’s life—and forced Blake Wrightman to vanish. Now, after twenty-years as “Charlie Ochs,” Cape Cod lobsterman, Blake finds out that the feds are closing in. But a vengeful G-man gives Charlie a choice: face the music or help smoke out the beautiful hardcore radical who seduced him into the anti-war movement back in the ’60s. So begins a long, strange trip for the former Blake Wrightman, as he revisits the scene of a deadly revolution that didn’t end with the Vietnam War—and is about to claim a few more casualties. . . .


From the Paperback edition.

About the Author, Peter Abrahams

Peter Abrahams is the author of eleven novels, including Last of the Dixie Heroes, Crying Wolf, A Perfect Crime, The Fan, and Lights Out, which was nominated for an Edgar Award for best novel. He lives on Cape Cod with his wife and four children. Visit his Web site at PeterAbrahams.com.


From the Paperback edition.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Radical terrorists of the '60s, now fugitives, face the karmic consequences of their past mistakes in this suspenseful but uneven thriller by the author of Hard Rain. Implicated in a campus bombing that killed an innocent boy, protagonist Blake Wrightman took on the identity of Cape Cod lobsterman Charlie Ochs and lived in solitude for 20 years. But early in this tale, Charlie falls in love and marries Emily, who is pregnant with his child. On the couple's wedding night, two government agents collar Charlie and threaten to hold him accountable--unless he helps them nail his former accomplices. The next morning Charlie sets off on a perilous journey across the continent and deep into his own past. Abrahams adroitly juggles the initially unconnected stories of his large cast of characters, building tension steadily as he brings their paths closer together. But other elements are less convincing. The federal agent who contacts Charlie is dying of cancer and pursuing an unauthorized personal vendetta. The frequent '60s flashbacks are too pat and verge on caricature. And the novel's central ironic refrain--yesterday's radicals as today's materialists--is hardly fresh, though Abrahams certainly milks it: the kid who built the radicals' bomb now supplies SDI software to the Pentagon; the group's old leader now develops real estate and has appeared on Jeopardy! Still, expert pacing and an intriguing plot hold the reader's interest. (Aug.)

Library Journal

To protest the U.S. invasion of Cambodia in 1970, three students bombed their college ROTC building, unintentionally killing an 11-year-old boy, then going underground. Twenty-two years later, Charlie Ochs, a lobsterman living a solitary life, lowers his guard when he meets a lovely woman and embarks on a course that will lead to convergence with the other two fugitives. A government counterterrorism agent, who is out to get a William Kunstler-like lawyer, takes advantage of coincidences to drive the action in this topical suspense story by the author of Pressure Drop (Dutton, 1989). Abrahams creates fully dimensional characters (deftly sketching even minor figures), crisp and true dialog, and fine texture and atmosphere, weaving his protagonists' lives together with considerable skill. Just about as good as it gets. Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 4/1/92.-- Michele Leber, Fairfax Cty. P.L., Va.

Book Details

Published
June 29, 2011
Publisher
Random House Publishing Group
Pages
320
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780307800787

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