I've read one other book by Elliot Ackerman, 2034: A Novel of the Next World War, a piece of speculative fiction co-written by Admiral Jim Stavridis about the third world war--and that was even before Russia started throwing its weight around. He is a veteran of several tours in Iraq as a Marine and of the CIA operations division. To paraphrase, there are three kinds of people in the world: sheep who do not recognize that evil exists, wolves who are evil and prey upon sheep, and sheepdogs who recognize the evil in the world and try to protect the sheep. This book took a while to engage me but did eventually. It is hard to describe the plot but Publishers Weekly does a decent job:
"International intrigue, classic heist tropes, and gonzo humor collide in this bruising page-turner from Ackerman (2054). Jay Manning, better known as "Skwerl," was a member of an elite CIA unit before one of his missions went FUBAR and he was fired. His old friend Aziz "Big Cheese" Iqbal is an Afghan pilot renowned for his ability to fly any kind of plane. Adrift without a war to fight, the two take to operating as mercenaries-for-hire. As the novel opens, Skwerl has persuaded Cheese to travel to Africa and "repossess" a luxury jet on behalf of an anonymous client. Things go south fast when they walk into an ambush, barely escaping in Cheese's plane to a hangar in rural Pennsylvania. They regroup and--with the help of a memorable supporting cast including Skwerl's dominatrix wife Sinead, an excommunicated Amish mechanic named Ephraim, and a former soldier nicknamed "Just Shane" who's gone off the grid in Colorado--try to determine who might have set them up. When Cheese's pregnant wife is kidnapped, things get more urgent. Ackerman, a former Marine, holds a funhouse mirror up to classic grizzled-soldier narratives while grounding the loopy proceedings with real stakes for his characters. The result is a riotous entertainment. "
Other favorable reviews come from Library Journal which concludes its review with "Ackerman ...crafts a fast-paced spy-ish story that offers frisson and humor in equal doses. Fans of Carl Hiaasen will enjoy." Booklist offers "Gripping and stylishly conveyed, this thriller is also a fascinating portrayal of the interconnectedness of contemporary global conflicts."
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