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A**Y
Number five in the six book series gives our Mountain Tigers a chance to swim in the warm waters off Florida. Start with Ghost
The Kildar and his band of Mountain Tigers serve the US President in this episode of the Paladin of Shadows by trying to interrupt a huge shipment of VX nerve gas into Florida. This deadly substance properly distributed can kill thousands of people even if we do not count the doomed Islamic terrorists who will do the distribution. Mike Harmon aka the Ghost aka Mike Jenkins aka the Kildar takes his Georgian mountain fighters into the warm climes of the Caribbean to find and slay his foes. Along the way he must overcome insensitive officials who haven’t got a clue about protecting their citizens and remorseless drug dealers who do not hesitate to kidnap a member of his personal staff. Bad move. Number five in the six volume Paladin of Shadows series brings back our familiar friends, the Kildar, his harem, his hired experts in the killing arts and his retainers, the Kildarea, warriors bred for over a thousand years to slay their enemies. I suggest beginning the series with “Ghost” the first in the series. Be warned that these books are not simply techo-military thrillers, although they are that. As Ringo himself has described “Ghost” in particular, they come very near to being soft core porn, especially the first book in the series. If graphic sex bothers you more than graphic slaughter, you might want to stay away. I like Ringo's work and I think he gets better as a writer the more he writes. I also like “A Deeper Blue” and feel that the 408 pages give me my full value as a buyer and a reader. I embrace his characters and find his rendering of fast action combat to be just about as good as it gets. I look forward to completing the series with book number six, “A Tiger by the Tail”.
J**J
What do I think about Ringo's Paladin books?
Gotta start with the dislikes, the book is a thing for guys who like to screw kids. No matter how you slice it, it just is not my thing. But I like the rest of the books just fine. I like action, smart women and that he uses women for important jobs. So many writers forget women have brains, unless they are assassins of course. Ringo can write, that's for sure.
D**K
Excellent military adventure, Not deep but fun.
Another in an ongoing fast paced military adventure series with good character development and excellent reality based tech support. Not deep but good escapist fun. Builds a believable (if simplistic) world framework similar in philosophy to John Norman's Gor series "if one cannot make sense of morality within some sort of satisfying, natural context, then one is likely to end up with no morality, or a competitive plethora of moralities in which ninety-nine percent of the world's population is convinced that the other ninety-nine percent is unclean, stupid, uninformed, vicious, depraved, in need of coercive correction, and such." The resulting hierarchy of power is inhabited by a protagonist similar to John D MacDonald's "Travis McGee", providing simple, righteous, thrilling solutions for complex real world problems. For context I rate Patrick O'Brian's "Aubrey-Maturin series a 5 star for character development. I give Ringo's work 4 stars because it has enough introspection for interest but not enough to slow the pace. The only complaint I have is that the books in this series aren't long enough. It's classic adventure fantasy for males young and old.
K**R
Love this author.
Has several series. All well thought out and explained. Great page turner with lots of twists. Looking forward to rereading time after time.
F**R
The Keldara marches on.
I've read the entire series as they have been published and enjoyed each one. The background and action are complete in depth and linear in nature. The lead character (Mike) is a complex man with elements of both light and darkness. As he himself says: "I'm a very bad man" . That is very true and yet he is also a champion of light and decency. As I said, he is complex. My only objection is, and has been, the graphic sex. It is part of the man and both illuminates and darkens him. I suspect the story line would be just fine without the detail. The characters grow with each installement and you are sorrowfulmwhen they die. Identification with a character is an essential element of any good book and this has it. For military action and accuracy you can't find a better modern writer.
T**R
Bambi is Back!
A Deeper Blue (2007)VX is nasty stuff. That's nerve agent for those of you who haven't been through he U. S. Army's Chemical, Biological and Radiological (CBR) Warfare School. One small drop will kill you in an instant.When Terrorists bring VX in via the Bahamas using SCUBA divers the President asks for everyone, including the Kildar, Mark Harmon. Unfortunately Mark is heart sick over the loss of his one true love and some Keldara (see Unto the Breach) so he refuses to go personally. Something about putting it where the sun doesn't shine or some such..Sometimes it takes a really bad man to get the job done and Mike can be a really bad man when he wants to be.The Bahamas, SCUBA diving, terrorists, all deductible from Ringo's tax return, need I say more? I'm jealous!Let's hope that Ringo keeps this series alive for a long time.Gunner July, 2,007
A**D
Dear editor
If you you are considering this book that means you have already read the previous 4 so any review would be superfluous. That said, the first 4 books had better editing. What i mean by that specifically is that in the first 4 books when the scene shifted as it does quite often in this series there was a clear indicator, typically a blank line, between scenes. THIS book has no indicators between scenes and that was very off-putting. I would very much recomend fixing that.
M**D
Mike's war on terror, book 5, and it's back in the USA
This is the fifth and currently (August 08) most recent book in the series which began with "Ghost" and continued with "Kildar." I have seen the series described by the names of both those books and also "Paladin of Shadows." In this book Mike Harmon and his team return to the USA at the request of the President to try to stop a terrorist attempt to attack various soft targets such as Disneyworld with lethal nerve gas.All the books in this series feature either counter-terror operations or actual pitched battles against Islamic extremists, and have most of the characters vocally expressing very right wing views. All five of the books have villains who enjoy inflicting sexual violence against women, up to and including rape and murder, and the central character also has sexual tastes which range from the kinky to the completely out of order, so none of the books are suitable for anyone squeamish. "A deeper blue" has rather less in the way of sex than the first few books in the series, but the central character appears to like shocking people, for example by openly referring to another character as his "harem manager."(The reader who has not read the previous books will be thinking "What! Does that mean what I think it does?" The answer is yes.)"A Deeper Blue", like the second, third and fourth books in the series, is less outrageous, and a bit better written, than "Ghost" but still pushes the envelope hard in several places. It also, for the first time in the series, presents one of the Muslims caught up in the activities of the terrorists as a decent human being who tries to limit the harm caused by his co-religionists. Nevertheless, as a rough litmus test, if you were strongly against the Iraq war, are very pro-feminist, or even slightly prudish, do your blood pressure a favour and refrain from touching this entire series with a ten foot barge-pole.Former SEAL Mike Harmon, codename Ghost, after fighting and defeating a number of terrorist plots, has settled down in a remote valley in the country of Georgia where he bought the local castle.The area concerned does not actually exist, but if it did, Russian tanks would have been rampaging through it while I was reading this book. I couldn't help thinking "Typical - as soon as Mike and his troops are off in the states Putin invades!"It turns out that the castle and associated farmland which Mike bought came with some feudal retainers, the Keldara, who accept him as their liege lord or "Kildar" - and if that sounds wierd and anachronistic at the start of the 21st century you ain't read nothing yet.Since Chechen terrorists are a major nuisance in the area on both sides of the Georgian/Russian frontier, Mike Harmon has trained some of his Keldara as an anti-terrorist militia with the knowledge and support of the Georgian, Russian, and US governments. (This was written at a time when relations between Russia and Georgia were merely bad, which is reflected in the book, but before they deteriorated into war and invasion.)During the previous book, an anti-terorist operation in search of stolen WMD (Weapons of Mass Destruction) led that militia into a pitched battle with a brigade of 4,000 Chechens which resulted in heavy casualties on both sides. The Keldara won, but at the start of the book Mike has locked himself away, grieving because a girl he was in love with was one of those killed.Mike and the Keldara had previously smashed a criminal conspiracy in which senior figures in the governments of most of the world's most powerful governments were implicated. The guilty individuals concerned have been quietly removed from power, but now Mike Harmon has both friends and enemies in all those governments. The pricipal effect of this in "A deeper blue" is that John Ringo can fantasise about his characters being able to say exactly what they think to assorted idiots, stuffed shirts, liberals and left-wingers (I am not associating these concepts, but the book does) and any appeal to higher authority on the part of those outraged at such comments hits a brick wall.Initially Mike Harmon does not want to respond to the request to go back to the USA and hunt for nerve gas, as he is too busy grieving. But he allows some of his people to go, and when two of them walk into a trap meant for Mike, anger snaps him back to himself: the terrorists soon won't know what hit them.One or two of Mike's old friends from "Ghost" also make an appearence in this book.The full "Paladin of Shadows" series currently consists ofGhostKildarChoosers of the SlainInto the BreachA Deeper BlueJohn Ringo normally writes military SF and most of his offerings in that genre are extremely good. This series is about a freelance war on terror. In places, and especially in the first book, Ringo seems to be in grave danger of crossing the line between challenging the reader and going out of your way to see how many people you can offend. That goes even for his existing fans among military SF readers, who are probably neither the most prudish or left/liberal of audiences.In fact the funniest part of "A Deeper Blue" and all the other books in the series from "Kildar" onwards is not part of the main text - it is the disclaimer at the start of the books which at least demonstrates that Ringo understands and has a sense of humour about the controversy "Ghost" stirred up. That disclaimer is worth quoting in full, it reads as follows:"This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental. This book and series has no connection to reality. Any attempt by the reader to replicate any scene in this series is to be taken at the reader's own risk. For that matter, most of the actions of the main character are illegal under US and international law as well as most of the stricter religions in the world."There is no Valley of the Keldara. Heck, there is no Kildar. And the idea of some Scots and Vikings getting together to raid the Byzantine Empire is beyond ludicrous."The islands described in a previous book do not exist. Entire regions described in these books do not exist. Any attempt to learn anything from these books is disrecommended by the author, the publisher and the author's mother who wishes to state that he was a very nice boy and she doesn't know what went wrong."Incidentally, that line about "any resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental" is a classic example of a blatantly false statement which escapes being a lie only because both author and reader know that it's a legal fiction which he has to write and makes no attempt to fool anyone. Osama Bin Laden and Vladimir Putin appear in these books under their real names, certain other characters will instantly be recognised by any politically aware reader as corresponding to real world US politicians.As mentioned, all five books in the series contain a great deal of violence, strongly expressed and very right-wing political views, and references to sex which are always utterly politically incorrect and sometimes fairly explicit. My copies of these books are stored where my children can't get at them and will be until they are adults.Provided you are not offended by the sex, violence and non-PC attitudes, these books can be quite exciting and entertaining in places. But I would advise feminists, left-wingers, and anyone even slightly prudish to save your money for something else.
K**R
Another great book in the series
Again an excellent read from John Ringo. All the usual things you would expect from this author, action through out, comedy, suspense and more battles. Still waiting to find out about "class 201." Can't wait for the next book.
G**R
Four Stars
A good book but not as good as the previous books in this series.
C**S
this is agreat second book
a great follow up yo yhe first book in the series look forward to him writing more of this series
A**R
Five Stars
Every John Ringo book is great
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