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Larry Bond's First Team: Angels of Wrath (Larry Bond's First Team)

By: Larry Bond
Binding: Mass Market Paperback
Publisher: Forge
ISBN: 0765346397
ISBN-13: 9780765346391
Released: 31 Oct 2006
RRP: £7.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Another Solid Effort - By: C. Green, 17 Mar 2006
Angels of Wrath is the second in Larry Bond & Jim DeFelice's First Team series. Once it again it follows the activities of the CIA's 'First Team', a covert action group who are not as cheesy as their name would imply. Lead as always by the sarcastic, pragmatic & highly effective Bob Ferguson, the team is tasked with monitoring a group of US based fundamentalists. This mission eventuallly takes them to Israel, Turkey, Syria, Lebanon & Iraq a events spiral out of control.

Which is the beauty of both this book & its predecessor in the series. Whatever complaints you make about First Team (and that name has to be one of them) you cannot include predictable plotting. Events in the team's world evolve organicallly & often in surprising directions. Unseen connections are identified, dead ends are pursued, plots evolve & unforseen events send the story off in completely new directions. It gives the whole book a ring of truthfulness that is lacking from other, more linear thrillers, although it does demand the reader's concentration. With new characters constantly being introduced, new places being visited & the team being divided into different groups with different tasks it would be easy to become confused if your weren't paying attention.

If you do keep up however, then you're rewarded with a story that is both exciting & believable, with just the right mixture of action & intrigue.

With this being a second novel featuring a recurring cast, there is also a feeling of characters developing. How much this would come across to someone who hadn't read the first book in the series is questionable, but for someone familiar with Ferg, Rankin, Corrine & the others its good to see them grow & become more interesting & complex.

Not that characterisation is necessarily the book's strong point in every case. Whilst the members of the team benefit from being given more time to breath & having appeared in the first novel, some of the supporting players come across as nothing more than cliches or ciphers, there to drive the plot on.

This lack of depth is a consequence of the speed at which the book moves. Written in short, punchy chapters & multiple acts, the action never ceases, with people constantly working or on the move. Some readers might find this sense of restlessness frustrating. It also, like the first book in the series, gives it the feel of a TV or movie script in book form, with lots of short scenes & multiple cuts. At times it feels like the literary equivalent of TV's 24.

These are minor quibbles however, & should not spoil readers enjoyment of what is an entertaining, fresh take on the contemporary thriller. If Bond & DeFelice produce further books up to the same high standard this series should run & run.