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Field of Fire (An Alex Duarte Mystery)
 
 

Field of Fire (An Alex Duarte Mystery) [Kindle Edition]

James O. Born
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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Sold by: Penguin Publishing
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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Born's fourth thriller introduces a new hero, but an implausible premise, stock characters and some clichéd prose may disappoint fans of his earlier novels (Escape Clause, etc.), which featured Florida lawman Bill Tasker. ATF agent Alex Duarte, who has seen military duty in Bosnia, is on assignment in South Florida. After a wanted fugitive, Alberto Salez, whom Duarte has arrested, gives him the slip, Duarte becomes involved in a high-level investigation into a series of bombings that Deputy Attorney General Roberto Morales, an Alberto Gonzalez–like figure, suspects are the work of radical labor unions. Meanwhile, a shadowy hit man is pursuing Salez in an effort to silence him. The author, himself a special agent with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, puts little of his own real-life expertise into the plot. Despite advance praise from Michael Connelly, Tess Gerritsen and W.E.B. Griffin, this effort falls short of the standard set by top-rank suspense writers. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

A bombing in a Florida migrant-labor camp kills a child, and ATF agent Alex Duarte is assigned the case. The Justice Department links the incident to a series of union-related bombings across the country and assigns a DOJ lawyer to work with Duarte. The intended bomb target is petty criminal Alberto Salez, whom Duarte catches, then loses. The chase is on. Diffusing Duarte's inherent laser focus is the bomber, who still wants Salez dead, and the DOJ lawyer, who seems to know more about the case than she's letting on. Born, a law-enforcement professional, shifts narrative points of view among all the major characters and also tinkers with chronology to keep readers on their toes. Born dedicates his fourth novel to Elmore Leonard, whose influence is evident. Leonard's best books (think City Primeval, 1980) have been urban noir with flawed, hard-bark protagonists consumed by the pursuit. Duarte would fit right in. Born has talent and momentum; don't be surprised if, soon enough, he has his own, Leonard-like breakthrough. Wes Lukowsky
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 327 KB
  • Publisher: Berkley (February 5, 2008)
  • Sold by: Penguin Publishing
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B00121SI5K
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #414,012 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A spectacular page turner, February 23, 2007
By 
Bookreporter (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Field of Fire (Hardcover)
James O. Born's first three books --- WALKING MONEY, SHOCK WAVE and ESCAPE CLAUSE --- featured Bill Tasker, a believable Florida Department of Law Enforcement agent in a series informed by Born's own FDLE experiences and the two-legged fauna that haunt the dark edges of the South Florida underworld. But none of Born's prior works (as uniformly great as they are) will prepare readers for FIELD OF FIRE, wherein Born breaks his own mold and begins again, with spectacular results.

FIELD OF FIRE is a bit disconcerting at first, but in a good, even excellent, way. The source of initial unease is Alex "Rocket" Duarte, a South Florida ATF agent who doesn't drink or smoke and will carry a firearm only with the greatest reluctance. Duarte is inordinately good looking but extremely slow on the uptake with the ladies, independent but living with his parents; he is a bit unsettling at first, but ultimately believable, given that to some degree we all know people like this. Duarte is like a character encountered in some wonderful collaboration between T. Jefferson Parker and Elmore Leonard.

The story is set against the insane backdrop of Broward County, in the streets, alleys and shops that are blocks removed from the sand and sun and frat-boy conviviality that deceptively rules the beachfront property. Duarte, gradually reacclimating himself to South Florida after a military tour of Bosnia, is hunting Alberto Salez, a gunrunner who is inordinately lucky and, unbeknownst to Duarte, as coldly vicious and homicidal as one can imagine. Duarte is also unaware that Mike Garretti, an explosives expert with an odd, unexpected tie to Duarte, is after Salez as well.

When one of Garretti's explosive efforts to eliminate Salez goes horribly wrong, the U.S. Attorney's office gets involved in the persona of Caren Larson, who has been dispatched by her Washington boss to see if there is any connection between the South Florida bombing and similar incidents in Virginia and Seattle. Larson is immediately attracted to Duarte; her gentle persistence, matched against his snail-like uptake, makes for some interesting reading as the two of them gradually uncover a scheme that leads somewhat uncomfortably back to one of them.

While the plot is more than enough to keep the pages turning, it is Born's ability to create off-the-wall yet believable characters that makes the book worth reading. Perhaps the main one of these is Duarte's father, a plumber who dispatches quiet, terse wisdom across the dinner table and who ultimately provides the key that Duarte and Larson need to blow their case open.

It is Duarte, however, who is the star of FIELD OF FIRE, and his instinct on when to follow and when to ignore the rules makes for intriguing reading. Similarly, Garretti, while no angel, is not all bad here either, and the rough and uneasy similarity between Garretti and Duarte creates some interesting, if unusual, chemistry. The result is a novel that, with Born's already impressive backlist, exponentially will increase his presence on the A-list of thriller fans everywhere.

--- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars fantastic police procedural, February 17, 2007
This review is from: Field of Fire (Hardcover)
ATF agent Alex "Rocket" Duarte has returned from Bosnia and is working diligently to get a promotion to a supervisory position. At present he and his partner are searching at the migrant camp in western Palm Beach County for Alberto Salez so they can arrest for him violating firearms statutes. The wily man escapes and later that night Salez's car explodes by someone who used it to tripwire it.

Caren Larson, a lawyer for the Department of Justice is assigned to work with Duarte because there have been two other G-4 bombings, one in Seattle and one in Virginia. Assistant Attorney General Bob Morales believes that the men who were targeted in the bombings were trying to organize labor and someone wanted them to stop. Duarte's instincts tell him there is a cover-up going on and when another person gets murdered in California, by the same hit man involved in the other bombings; he believes Caren is holding back on him, something that could cost all the people working on the case their lives.

FIELD OF FIRE is a fantastic police procedural with a protagonist who once he gets the scent of a crime is like a bloodhound who needs to continue until he gets his prey. Women will adore the hero who is innocent when it comes to females but has superlative investigative skills that allow him to think outside the box. Surprisingly, the hitman has a conscience in spite of how he makes a living as he goes out of his way not to kill Duarte. He needs his own novel.

Harriet Klausner
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good Beach Read, November 24, 2009
I first read Born with his WALKING MONEY, enjoying it alot. Born is a real life law enforcement agent in Florida and he writes with the knowledge he has. Good cop stuff with his hero Bill Tasker.
This book we get a new protagonist, ATF agent, Alex "Rocket" Duarte. He is very likeable too, and since I live in Palm Beach County, Florida, the site of most of the book's action, that is fun. This character I liked, but the book itself sometimes was a little slow paced. I call it a beach read. Better than ok, but a little lacking. To be sure I will read James O.Born again. His stuff is good but not Elmore Leonard, yet, yet.
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More About the Author

I was always interested in writing and even took a shot as an undergrad at Florida State but aside from one article on street construction in Tallahassee I was unsuccessful.

I moved on to police work. When I was new to police work, as an agent with U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, I had an unrealistic view of what my job would be like. On television, DEA agents are in shoot-outs and get the chicks but in real life they follow suspected drug violators around until they can make a case. If you're a new guy, no one in the DEA much cares about family life or other interests, you just drive. I read a lot of Tom Clancy and W.E.B. Griffin because I liked the idea of learning something about the military. I would read the occasional police book but felt the books didn't reflect my experience as a cop. I was not a CIA trained assassin. I could not rip a shotgun out of someone's hands without suffering a catastrophic injury. I didn't crawl out of crushed police cars and shake off the injury. Neither did any cop I knew. So I wrote a book based on real police work with a ficitonal plot.

The most exciting part of being an author is that my editor, Neil Nyren, is also the editor of my two favorite military writers, Tom Clancy and W.E.B. Griffin.

The third book in the series, Escape Clause, was released in February, 2006. The story follows the main character to a prison to investigate an in custody death that isn't what it appears. By chance, I was assigned to investigate a death at South Bay correctional, the area I had used as a model for the town and prison in my book. Talk about life imitating art. Then, once at the prison, a Department of Corrections Inspector asked me if I was the guy who wrote the books. I gave him a post card for Escape Clause and watched his face as he realized I had written about the Department of Corrections.

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