Join Books.org — it's free

Fiction, Action & Adventure
The General by Patrick A. Davis β€” book cover

The General

by Patrick A. Davis, Jim Bond
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Synopsis

To solve a murder, to uncover a conspiracy -- that's the tall order Lieutenant Colonel Charlie Jensen is faced with in Patrick A. Davis's debut thriller, The General. When General Raymond Watkins of the Air Force is found brutally murdered via a Vietcong-style torture session, Jensen is called in to investigate. He soon learns that this murder is merely a link in a much longer and more horrifying chain of events that stretches from Vietnam to the highest levels of the U.S. government.

Kirkus Reviews

Routine military whodunit set in the dusty warrens of the Pentagon, from a former Air Force major. Shortly after putting the dinner dishes in the sink, Colonel Charlie Jensen, a contented family man who is also commander of the Air Force's P-Directorate, an elite criminal-investigations unit that handles only the highest profile cases, gets a phone call. The corpse of Air Force General Watkins, a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has been found at home in his study, his skin brutally slashed in a torture-style execution commonly used many years ago by the Vietcong. Though he would normally lead the investigation, Jensen is ordered to play second fiddle to Colonel "Tip" Tippett, a heroic veteran of Vietnam and Desert Storm, as well as a Jensen family friend, who has been hitting the bottle since he was passed over for a general's star. Almost by accident, Jensen discovers that Watkins' last call was to a Vietnamese restaurant on 14th Street near Washington's red-light district. The general's aide, the drop-dead gorgeous Major Talia Swanson, confirms that though her boss had served in Vietnam and recently visited former prisoner-of-war camps there, he was no fan of cracked rice and spring rolls. In fact, just before he died, Watkins was about to stop the current President's plans to normalize relations with Vietnam—a move that Watkins's rival, General Holmes, supports. The body count grows: Vietnamese and American Air Force officers, who may know something about a secret massacre in a North Vietnamese prison camp from which General Holmes conveniently escaped, are stabbed, shot, sliced to pieces, or blown up. In the process, Davis' dialogue-heavy narrative moves quickly, butits lack of descriptive detail and distinguishable characters lends an artificiality to the plot, which is yanked along by plug-in melodramatics like kidnappings and faked deaths. A terse, gung-ho military-thriller debut sans the usual high-tech hardware. Lots of action, but not much else.

About the Author, Patrick A. Davis

Parick A. Davis is a former Air Force major with more than thirteen years of experience. He helped plan and direct U-2 surveillance operations for Desert Storm, and flew eleven combat sorties. He is the author of The General and The Passenger, available from Brilliance Audio. Davis is a pilot for a major airline and lives in Roanoke, Texas.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Book Details

Published
August 1, 2009
Publisher
Brilliance Audio
Format
MP3 on CD
ISBN
9781423391548

More by Patrick A. Davis

Similar books