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The Assassins Gallery by David L. Robbins — book cover

The Assassins Gallery

by David L. Robbins
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Overview

New Year’s Eve, 1945. The assassin steps out of the Atlantic Ocean in the middle of a raging nor’easter. Cool and efficient, she’s a weapon of war superbly trained in the ancient arts of subterfuge and murder. And even though she’s outnumbered, she’s got one major advantage: No one knows she’s coming.

Professor Mikhal Lammeck’s specialty is the history and weaponry of assassins. But even Lammeck is caught off guard when the Secret Service urgently requests his help: A gruesome double murder and suicide in Massachusetts has set off alarm bells. It’s only a hunch, but all too soon Lammeck suspects the unthinkable.

In the waning days of the war, someone wants one last shot to alter history. An assassin is headed to Washington, D.C., to kill the most important soldier of them all: the U.S. commander in chief. As Lammeck and a killer at the top of her profession circle the streets of the capital in the hunt for FDR, one of them will attempt to kill the world’s most powerful man; the other, to save him. And between them, for an instant, history will hang in the balance. . . .

From the Hardcover edition.

Synopsis

New Year’s Eve, 1945. The assassin steps out of the Atlantic Ocean in the middle of a raging nor’easter. Cool and efficient, she’s a weapon of war superbly trained in the ancient arts of subterfuge and murder. And even though she’s outnumbered, she’s got one major advantage: No one knows she’s coming.

Professor Mikhal Lammeck’s specialty is the history and weaponry of assassins. But even Lammeck is caught off guard when the Secret Service urgently requests his help: A gruesome double murder and suicide in Massachusetts has set off alarm bells. It’s only a hunch, but all too soon Lammeck suspects the unthinkable.

In the waning days of the war, someone wants one last shot to alter history. An assassin is headed to Washington, D.C., to kill the most important soldier of them all: the U.S. commander in chief. As Lammeck and a killer at the top of her profession circle the streets of the capital in the hunt for FDR, one of them will attempt to kill the world’s most powerful man; the other, to save him. And between them, for an instant, history will hang in the balance. . . .


Publishers Weekly

Set in 1945 near the end of WWII, Robbins's daring thriller opens with a brutal, brilliantly described double murder on the beach near Newburyport, Mass. From that scene to the end of the novel, the author's sure-handed control of his material never lets up, aided by his clear focus on the killer, a woman named "Judith," and the man assigned to solve the murders, professor Mikhal Lammeck, an expert in the methods of assassins. As Lammeck's investigations take him up and down the East Coast and, increasingly, to Washington, D.C., he comes to realize that someone may be trying to assassinate President Roosevelt. Robbins (War of the Rats) has an uncanny ability to provide just the right amount of historical detail without overwhelming the plot. This talent, coupled with superior characterization and a masterful, direct writing style will provide thriller lovers with one of their best reads of the year. The powerful climax deserves the term "heart-stopping." (Aug.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, David L. Robbins

David L. Robbins is the bestselling author of War of the Rats, Liberation Road, Last Citadel, Scorched Earth, The End of War, and Souls to Keep. He divides his time among Richmond, Boston, and his sailboat.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Set in 1945 near the end of WWII, Robbins's daring thriller opens with a brutal, brilliantly described double murder on the beach near Newburyport, Mass. From that scene to the end of the novel, the author's sure-handed control of his material never lets up, aided by his clear focus on the killer, a woman named "Judith," and the man assigned to solve the murders, professor Mikhal Lammeck, an expert in the methods of assassins. As Lammeck's investigations take him up and down the East Coast and, increasingly, to Washington, D.C., he comes to realize that someone may be trying to assassinate President Roosevelt. Robbins (War of the Rats) has an uncanny ability to provide just the right amount of historical detail without overwhelming the plot. This talent, coupled with superior characterization and a masterful, direct writing style will provide thriller lovers with one of their best reads of the year. The powerful climax deserves the term "heart-stopping." (Aug.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

What if an assassin had targeted President Roosevelt as World War II powers down, and what if the only way the expert called in to help can thwart said cutthroat is to pretend to be after the President himself? Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Robbins (Liberation Road, 2005, etc.) again concocts an ingenious suspense thriller around the momentous events of WWII. This time, a foreign assassin stalks President Roosevelt. On New Year's morning, 1945, two civilians patrolling the shoreline are killed on the beach of Newburyport, Mass. Secret Service agent "Dag" Nabbit appeals for help in solving the case from his former professor Mikhal Lammeck, an American historian currently training teams of men in Scotland for clandestine activities behind enemy lines. In his spare time, Lammeck ponders the fascinating question of whether history is made by people or by events. The Newburyport murders, he learns, were committed using a 12th-century knife belonging to a Middle Eastern cult that fought the Templars during the Crusades. This tells Lammeck, whose expertise includes familiarity with Marco Polo's diaries, that the killer is probably a highly trained, cold-blooded master of open-hand combat and poisons. In fact, that's a very good description of "Judith," a Persian-born woman trained in American schools and now passing as an innocent New Orleans black girl looking for work in Washington, D.C. Judith executes rigorous stylized exercises in her room at night, smokes hashish and murders innocent people close to her without a trace of remorse. Lammeck tracks his target by waiting for her; he's concluded that he's bound to run into the assassin if he sticks close to FDR, at a low ebb of public esteem in 1945 and considered by many to be an intolerable despot. Robbins manages some tricky historical sleight-of-hand by placing Judith on the domestic staff of Lucy Mercer Rutherfurd, Roosevelt's former mistress, whom he began to see again inhis last months. Who has hired her to kill the president? The answer is not straightforward in a novel unafraid to tackle some big ideas. A solid, satisfying treat for the armchair historian.

Book Details

Published
June 1, 2007
Publisher
Random House Publishing Group
Pages
544
Format
Mass Market Paperback
ISBN
9780553588217

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