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Havana Run [Audio Cassette]

Les Standiford (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Audio Cassette
  • Publisher: Books on Tape (2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0736696830
  • ISBN-13: 978-0736696838
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #6,019,704 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Skip the Run and the Read, July 14, 2003
By 
The latest in the series featuring John Deal finds him in Key West, Florida overseeing a construction project. Picking up where "Bone Key" left off, the project is moving forward and things are going so well, John has opened a satellite office in the area and is occasionally commuting to the home office in Miami. If it weren't for Isabella, his daughter who lives with his estranged wife Janice, he would ditch Miami and move to the Keys.

Then the rich Mr. Fuentes arrives in his small non-descript office in Key West. Mr. Fuentes has a proposition for John Deal. The days of Castro are numbered and the rebuilding of Cuba, especially the historical landmarks in Havana, will soon be underway. Mr. Fuentes wants John to follow his deceased father's footsteps back to Cuba and consult on the rebuilding. Mr. Fuentes brushes aside current political concerns and believes that once Castro departs this mortal coil, a tidal wave of money, especially American money, will wash over the island. John Deal would not only get a consulting fee now for making the trip and considering what needs to be done, he would stand to make a fortune once the actual work began underway. This could be the final break he needs to once again bring the construction company his father created, DealCO, all the way back to its preeminent status.

John Deal agrees to consider the scope of the work and soon arrives in Havana, Cuba aboard Mr. Fuentes opulent yacht. Like the crumbling structures that hide the past beauty of the city, the real reason Mr. Fuentes brought him to Cuba lies hidden beneath the surface. Slowly, it becomes apparent as John finds himself the target of gun wielding thugs and the center of a political mess in Cuba and at home. Survival, not money becomes paramount as John Deal struggles to escape the island alive.

This is not the normal John Deal series book that I have grown accustomed to reading over the years. Missing is the humor, the occasional witty comment, that served as additional background in the other novels of the series. In fact, the human element is all but lost in this novel that spends so much time in regards to family connections.

Instead, the reader is told that one should feel emotion over various things throughout the novel, but that emotional connection to the reader is never made. There is a certain distance to the writing, which is especially surprising considering some of the various personal events in John Deal's past that are covered. Considering the obvious storytelling possibilities, this lack of emotion is amazing and can't be discussed further without giving away major portions of the novel.

This book also hardly answers the many questions that it raises. One question is answered at the end, but most are left dangling in what appears to be nothing more than a setup for the next novel of the series. With so much unfinished business, it leaves this reader feeling just a bit cheated. Les Standiford has taken his readers off on a tangent and the question remains whether he will return them to the main highway or crash in a dead end.

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4.0 out of 5 stars How did I miss this one???, January 21, 2004
By 
Charles J. Marr (Cambridge Springs, Pa USA) - See all my reviews
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Somehow I just picked this novel up last month. Do you read every Florida Keys Mystery/Action you can get? I do and I have a scale of favorites. Corcoran, Hall, and White in that order plus a few lesser lights. Of course in the well known writers' works the standard wicked crew, developers, pols and tee shirt moguls plus the mob have become a bit too wearing on the beleagured "conchs." Thus it is a pleasure to read the adventures of John Deal and his Dealco development corporation, dedicated to making a buck but not vast sums of bucks by doing condos right. (If there is any way to do them right.)

In Bone Key, Deal and sidekick fell into the Key West scene as potential developers of a "martello" tower centered resort. His inherited and endangered development corporation was just recovering from the suicide of his less environmentally dedicated father's suspicious "dealings."(Yep, puns appear now and then.) This novel continues the tale and expands upon it, bringing into the picture his father's early ties to Cuba and plans for post CAstro development.

Who these developers may be (off shore banks and all) their ties to on island dissidents and off island exiles and the U.S. Government's desires to snoop on everyone (gives new meaning to the U.S. Interest Section) is the heart of this book. Given current state of boat traffic between the Keys and Cuba,rumors, speculation over future development in Cuba and the general murkiness of ownership of those luxury villas popping up along island edges, there's more than a bit of reality here.

Then too, it's kind of fun to see a hero developer. Talk to anyone in the Keys and they will tell you that's kind of like the tooth fairy. It would be nice.

Finally, this novel reads a bit faster than Bone Key. I thought there was just a bit too much repetitious complication in that earlier one. (Read it during a long airport wait, so I might misjudge it a bit. It does give some background which helps here.)

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3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting but unconvincing, August 20, 2003
Since his father's suicide and manufactured evidence of his corruption, John Deal has been forced off the police force and struggled to recover his father's once-thriving construction business from the financial problems his father's death had created. When wealthy hispanic businessman Fuentes offers Deal a million dollars as a retainer and invites him to Havana, Deal initially resists. He doesn't believe in things being too good to be true--he can't afford the hidden costs. But when the government asks him to cooperate with Fuentes, he agrees to play along.

Once in Havana, life becomes complicated. In addition to the government, at least two groups seem to want Deal's cooperation. An adventure of chases through the jungle, into Ernest Hemmingway's old boat, and through the streets of Havana ensues. What Deal learns is that there are secrets within secrets and tha everything he had believed is a fabrication.

Author Les Standiford offers a well written and interesting adventure story. Despite the implausibility of much of the story, Standiford's adventure-telling draws the reader in. Deal is largely unsympathetic and emotionally uncompelling as his cynical nature refuses to let him believe anyone (probably wise since everyone has been lying to him). HAVANA RUN does raise a number of important questions--the role of the mob in post-Castro Cuba, the trigger-happy nature of both the Cuban and American militaries, and whether the U.S.'s current restrictions on contact with Cuba truly serve anyone's interest.

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