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7 Reviews
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Boy's own adventure,
By
This review is from: Soft Target (A Dan Shepherd Mystery) (Paperback)
Just as some books are rather scathingly called "chick lit", this is the very opposite, a boy's own adventure, culminating in the story of the London terrorist bombings of recent times. Dan Sheperd is an undercover cop who is sent into all kinds of secret assignments. A former SAS member who is still coming to terms with the loss of his wife in a car accident, he is slotted into a group of SO19 police officers who handle special situation problems, but who are suspected of having a few loose cannons among their members. Dan is still operating as a so called hit man, in an effort to expose a big time mobster, whose wife conveniently wants him dead and has hired Dan in his role as hit man, to do the job. The SO19 cops who have gone bad, accept Dan into their ranks and plan their next coup against drug dealers, hoping to make some big money. The author has followed the real plot of the Muslim extremists in their plan to blow up the underground railway system in London and has included lots of technical details about the weaponry of both the police, the terrorists and their training programs. It's a good, fast read, even though it will probably appeal more to the boys.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A whopping cell phone bill, no doubt,
By
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This review is from: Soft Target (A Dan Shepherd Mystery) (Paperback)
It wasn't until I was well into SOFT TARGET that I realized it's apparently the second in the Dan Shepherd series. The third installment, COLD KILL, I'd read some months ago - see my review "How hardball do we play it" dated 6/29/06 - and the first, HARD LANDING, awaits on my unread shelf. I wish I'd read them in order, but who was to know? As I recall, even the Hardy Boys mysteries of my youth were sequentially numbered on the jacket.
Ex-SAS trooper Dan Shepherd is now a Detective Constable with London's Metropolitan Police seconded to a special hush-hush undercover unit tasked with missions otherwise impossible. In SOFT TARGET, the marks are a businessman and a crime lord's wife, each soliciting the murder of his partner and her husband respectively, where Dan plays killer-for-hire Tony Nelson, and a corrupt cop in the Met's elite armed response unit, which Dan joins as Stuart Marsden, that tackles armed pizza shop bandits, a gang of roving teenage thugs on the Tube, and, ultimately, Moslem suicide bombers. On his bedside table, Dan/Tony/Stu has a cell phone for each identity. Kathy Gift is the shrink assigned by Dan's boss to make sure that Shepherd, who recently lost his wife in a road accident, isn't suffering debilitating stress. Gee, why would one think that? I gather that SOFT TARGET and HARD LANDING - the latter I have yet to read, you recall - serve as the character development bit in the evolution of author Stephen Leather's hero, whose ultimate mission in his fictional life is to foil Arab terrorists. In SOFT TARGET, there's fleeting reference to a mysterious Saudi, who travels the world on a British passport recruiting and arming suicide bombers, and who plays a major roll in COLD KILL. I'm giving SOFT TARGET four stars not because it falls short as a thriller, but simply because it's not quite as riveting as COLD KILL, to which I gave five stars. (This reviewing gig is subjective and relative, after all.) I'm also somewhat impatient with the text space devoted to Dan's well-meaning but too often shoddy performance as a single Dad to his now motherless son, Liam. I gather Leather included this to show Dan as a regular bloke with a warm, fuzzy side to attract female readers, but the subplot never seems to go anywhere (and doesn't in COLD KILL, either). Less Liam and more Gift would've been more interesting. Stephen tells me that there's to be a fourth Shepherd novel (in which, presumably, Dan's confrontation with Islamic nutters escalates). I'm actually looking forward to this book more than I am the first in the series because by that time the Shepherd character will have evolved to literary maturity.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
David Mould, Bangkok,
By
This review is from: Soft Target (A Dan Shepherd Mystery) (Paperback)
Having read this straight off the back of Hard Landing and being 100 or so pages in it feels exactly the same. Dan "Spider" Shepherd is assigned on once case and it morphs into another.
It's still a good read but I would recommend that you change authors in between or switch to another book outside the series
3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Nothing special,
By bibliophile "A.B" (Florida USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Soft Target (A Dan Shepherd Mystery) (Paperback)
Leather's new character/hero, Dan Shepperd is predictable even boring. Leather's writing was characterized by excitement and unpredictability and an element of "noir". Shepperd is almost a "goody two shoes" persona,with his beliefs and fixations of good and bad, his loyalty to SAS, his loyal ex buddies and thousand more cliches, etc etc etc, making his Soft Target and Hard Landing strong candidates for the worst books he had ever written.
His previous work(i.e double tap,long shot,Tunnel rats,hungry ghost etc) were exemplary novels,interesting,keeping you on the edge,page turners,not merely satisfied with Hollywood type scenarios of good and evil ,whereas good must always prevail. I sincerely hope that Stephen Leather gets a grip, and drops the Dan Shepperd ,"good cop" "great hero" bla,bla,bla, character and gets back on track to what he does best-great writing
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Loose Ends,
This review is from: Soft Target (A Dan Shepherd Mystery) (Paperback)
This is the second book I've read in the series, though reading it now in 2011, the terrorist themes getting a bit old hat.
The action was good and the idea of being undercover investigating cops was interesting, though I felt poorly executed. Once Shepard had infiltrated the police, the plot moved far to quickly and character development was lost, not to mention the sub-plot with the gangsters, which in a word were cardboard cut-outs. What happened with the Business man under lock-down? What happened with the Teenagers on the tube? I felt that the ending was too contrived, and the terrorist bombing was just an excuse to close the case. The book was rushed and the characters weren't developed enough to care about them, except for maybe Rose who really got a raw deal in the end. There were just too many threads which were left hanging in the end to give a damn, but I'll try the next book to see if it's an improvement.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Chasing the bad guys and finding a good sitter for the kid,
By Joseph P. Menta, Jr. (Philadelphia, PA USA) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (TOP 1000 REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Soft Target (A Dan Shepherd Mystery) (Paperback)
This was the first time I sampled the adventures of British undercover cop Dan "Spider" Shepherd, and I quite enjoyed it. What's great is that the book delivers the kind of tough thrills promised on the cover and in the book's description, but also pleasantly surprises the reader with sensitively-written scenes involving Dan and his home life. Shepherd is a new widower as the book opens (presumably as a result of events chronicled in past volumes), and he has to balance his official duties with raising his young son.
The quieter scenes, however, don't in any way water down the action plot. In fact author Stephen Leather seems to go out of his way here to give the reader lots of separate little adventures for Shepherd to handle, which results in many interesting scenarios. For example, it's fun to watch Shepherd juggling all his various undercover identities in his head, and making sure he always answers the correct cell phone (he has several) with the correct "personality". "Soft Target" delivers action, thrills, colorful antagonists, intelligent commentary on our times, nicely-drawn characters, and a setting- London and its environs- not seen in every other thriller. I'm looking forward to catching up on other titles in this series.
1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Action all the way,
By Dan Lyons (Sydney, Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Soft Target (A Dan Shepherd Mystery) (Paperback)
Stephen Leather just gets better and better. His Dan 'Spider' Shepherd hero is as good as Mike Cramer, the SAS guy he killed off in The Double Tap. Hopefully Shepherd will stay the course. In Soft Target, Leather predicted the bombings on the London Underground. In Cold Kill, he has terrorists attacking the Eurostar cross-Channel train. Only Shepherd can save the day! A fast-paced read that I couldn't put down.
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Soft Target by Stephen Leather (Audio Cassette - July 30, 2005)
$99.95
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