cover image Jackstraw

Jackstraw

Ron Faust. Turner, $17.95 trade paper (416p) ISBN 978-1-62045-521-0

In this sophisticated thriller, Faust (Sea of Bones) introduces readers to narrator Thomas Jackstraw, a mercenary killer on assignment in Latin America training would-be soldiers. Before long, operatives of the fledgling American Patriotic Party%E2%80%94an alternative to the traditional Democratic and Republican parties%E2%80%94offer Jackstraw both fortune and asylum to fake the assassination of its sexed-up female vice presidential candidate, Rachel Leah Valentine, unleashing a tangled plot that takes readers on a whirl-wind adventure spanning Third World jungles, seedy Chicago hotel rooms, and the storm-whipped Rocky Mountains. Jackstraw, a West Point expellee who comes from a long line of distinguished mili-tary men, realizes he's been set up after the staged shooting in a crowded Latin American public square backfires and the aging APP presidential candidate takes a fatal bullet. Jackstraw retreats to the United States and becomes the most wanted man in America while quietly plotting revenge on his double-crossers. Complicating matters is his steamy relationship with Valentine and an ambitious re-porter's quest to clear Jackstraw's name with a career-defining story. Snappy, realistic dialogue and Jackstraw's snark propel the narrative, and he emerges as a charismatic, though potentially polarizing, villain with traces of a conscience. Love him or hate him, Faust should give Jackstraw another starring role. (May)