The Soldier of Fortune series was published between 1976 and 1985
with a brief hiatus in the early 80s. The series was created and edited
by Peter McCurtin (1929-1997), a talented action-adventure scribe who
also authored 10 of the series' 18 installments. The premise is very
simple: anti-hero Jim Rainey is a professional soldier for hire whose
loyalties always lie with the side who signs the checks. The Deadliest
Game (1976) is the series' second novel and finds Rainey hunting
terrorists in Argentina.
Political extremists calling themselves the Cordoba Committe are
terrorizing the Argentinean city of La Boca. While visiting a friend
named Quinlan, Rainey finds himself in the terrorists' crossfire at the
War Ministry Annex. After teaming with Quinlan to kill the baddies, the
country's president offers Rainey $5,000 if he can dispose of the
terrorist cell. Rainey accepts under the condition that he has complete
autonomy in his methods. However, the president still wants Rainey to
adhere to some military rules of engagement and assigns him an ex-Nazi
leader named Richter to assist.
The book's early chapters features Rainey recruiting the vilest of
mercenaries for the job. Playing off of 1967's The Dirty Dozen (and Garrison's Gorillas television show), Rainey eventually incorporates
military criminals into his small Army. But aside from the Cordoba
Committe, Rainey's stiffest opposition is Richter, an old war horse who
favors uniformed parades over modern day guerrilla tactics.
I've always loved McCurtin's writing style, and this novel nicely
showcases the author's talent. His first-person narrative adds a unique
perspective to what is quintessentially a team-based combat book. In the
hands of another author, Rainey's character could have been
one-dimensional with the familiar formula of 1-2-3-Kill. Thankfully
under McCurtin's prose, both Rainey and the supporting characters are
far more dynamic. McCurtin's colleague, author Ralph Hayes, wrote seven
of the series' installments under McCurtin's name, and I think they are
equals in terms of storytelling.
Despite the average finale, I found The Deadliest Game to be a
riveting, high-caliber read. The novel was released by both Tower and
Belmont in the U.S. and features two different covers. For a complete
bibliography and some additional series background, check out the
Paperback Warrior review for the 17th entry Bloodbath HERE. Buy a copy of this book HERE.
No comments:
Post a Comment