From Publishers Weekly
Set in 1998, Cain's solid sequel to his debut, The Accident Man (2008), finds assassin Samuel Carver recovering in a private Swiss hospital from being brutally tortured. Unable to remember who he is or what he's done in the past, he's being cared for by his girlfriend, Alix Petrova, a former Russian spy. Meanwhile, oilman Waylon McCabe, who's dying of cancer, decides he must bring on nuclear Armageddon so he can ascend to heaven in the Rapture. Lt. Gen. Kurt Vermulen has been trying to alert the U.S. government to the dangers of a small terrorist group known as al Qaeda, but no one will listen except the evil McCabe, who soon has the gullible Vermulen attempting to snag one of about a hundred suitcase nukes the Russians have secreted around the world. Eventually, Carver comes to his senses and sets out to find Alix, who's left his bedside on her old bosses' orders to seduce Vermulen. Most thriller fans will enjoy this roller-coaster action adventure ride. (Mar.)
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Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
The pseudonymous Cain doesn’t shrink from tackling big topics. In the initial novel in this series, The Accident Man (2008), he hypothesized an explanation for the death of Princess Diana. Here, he gins up a demented, born-again Texas oil billionaire determined to incite Armageddon via a Russian suitcase nuke: Christians vs. Muslims. Samuel Carver, the Accident Man, who once before failed to kill the rapacious Texan, is a shattered husk in a Swiss sanatorium, but he must rouse himself to save the world—and rescue his lover, former KGB agent Alexandra Petrova. No Survivors is uneven. Action sequences are vividly written. Carver’s use of common household products to single-handedly overwhelm a houseful of Georgian gangsters or bring down a corporate jet sounds plausible, and these scenes make hugely entertaining set pieces. In addition, the descriptions of locales as diverse as Kosovo, Geneva, and the Côte d’Azur seem knowing. But character development is less skillful, and the apocalyptic plot, while essentially plausible, seems, well, too Bondian. Even so, there is plenty to like here for action-oriented thriller fans. --Thomas Gaughan
