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Assassin: A Novel
Assassin: A Novel

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Author: Ted Bell
Publisher: Pocket Star
Category: Book

List Price: $9.99
Buy Used: $0.60
You Save: $9.39 (94%)



New (25) Used (36) from $0.60

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 75 reviews
Sales Rank: 13907

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 608
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 4.1 x 1.4

ISBN: 1416587128
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6
EAN: 9781416587125
ASIN: 1416587128

Publication Date: May 20, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Help save a tree. Buy all your used books from Green Earth Books. Read -> Recycle -> Reuse!

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Assassin: A Novel
  • Audio Download - Assassin: An Alex Hawke Thriller (Unabridged)
  • Hardcover - Assassin: A Novel
  • Hardcover - Assassin
  • Paperback - Assassin
  • Audio Cassette - Assassin (Hawke) (Hawke)
  • Audio Cassette - Assassin (Hawke) (Hawke)
  • Audio CD - Assassin (Hawke) (Hawke)
  • Audio CD - Assassin (Hawke) (Hawke)
  • Audio CD - Assassin (Hawke) (Hawke)
  • Audio CD - Assassin (Hawke) (Hawke)
  • MP3 CD - Assassin (Hawke) (Hawke)
  • MP3 CD - Assassin (Hawke) (Hawke)
  • Kindle Edition - Assassin
  • Hardcover - Assassin: A Novel (Hawke)
  • Mass Market Paperback - Assassin: A Thriller (Hawke)

Similar Items:

  • Hawke: A Thriller
  • Pirate (Hawke) (Hawke)
  • Spy
  • Tsar: A Thriller
  • Nick of Time

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Alex Hawke is back. In this explosive,jaw-tightening follow-up to Ted Bell's ""rich, spellbinding, and absorbing"" (Clive Cussler) debut national bestseller, Hawke, fearless intelligence operative Lord Alexander Hawke matches wits with a cunning and bloodthirsty psychopath in a desperate race to avert an American Armageddon.

In an elegant palazzo on the Grand Canal, an American ambassador's tryst turns deadly. In the seamy underbelly of London, a pub-crawling killer is on the loose. And in a storybook chapel nestled in the Cotswolds, a marriage made in heaven turns to hell on earth. Isolated incidents? Or links in a chain of events hurtling towards catastrophe? So begins Assassin, the tour de force thriller that heralds the return of every terrorist's worst nightmare, Alex Hawke.

A shadowy figure known as the Dog is believed to be the ruthless terrorist who is systematically and savagely assassinating American diplomats and their families around the globe. As the deadly toll mounts inexorably, Hawke, along with former NYPD cop and Navy SEAL Stokely Jones, is called upon by the U.S. government to launch a search for the assassin behind the murders.

Hawke, who ""makes James Bond look like a ""slovenly, dull-witted clockpuncher"" (Kirkus Reviews), is soon following a trail that leads back to London in the go-go nineties, when Arab oil money fueled lavish, and sometimes fiendish, lifestyles. Other murky clues point to the Florida Keys, where a vicious killer hides behind the gates of a fabled museum. And to a remote Indonesian island where a madman tinkers with strains of a deadly virus and slyly bides his time.

Hawke must call upon resources deep within himself. He must enter a race against time to stop a cataclysmic attack on America's most populous cities and avengethe inexplicable and horrific crime that has left him devastated.

Brimming with relentless action and stylish detail, and featuring a hero that readers wil"


Customer Reviews:   Read 70 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars This thriller's a gripper   July 29, 2004
 16 out of 20 found this review helpful

Ted Bell is a master yarn-spinner of the most exquisite type. He knows how to slip in and out of each character's: ... skin; ... speech pattern; ... and inherent response to events... in a way that few writers know how to do, or could even understand and appreciate.

I call this book a 'gripper' because it gripped my attention so strongly that I was pulled away from EVERYTHING else for a couple of days. I've only experienced this total-immersion attraction with the works of a few other writers - Trevanian and John Fowles, for example.

I'm an advertising guy who has zero aspiration to do what Ted does so deftly, but as an advertising copywriter and business educator myself, I can see little hints of the former advertising exec peeking through the master plotting and descriptive exposition. Every now and again; especially in the devastatingly funny chapter about the London movie premiere.

What's neat is Bell's ad-background element doesn't get in the way of the story or the entertainment - it adds to it.

But what's especially appealing to me about the writing is that Bell knows when to be superficial and blatant, and when to be deep, ruminative and subtle. If you are a discriminating reader, some of the superficial and blatant exposition and dialogue may throw you off at first. Yet once you allow yourself to get pulled into the story and engaged you'll appreciate the author's artistry.

You will know -- as they say in the storytelling trade -- that you are in good hands.



1 out of 5 stars Why was this book printed and sold?   February 5, 2005
 15 out of 24 found this review helpful

I am a book lover of over 75 years and have read gloriously written, deeply interesting fiction. This garbage is at exactly the opposite end. Consider this:

1. A huge bodyguard is allowed by his superfat Muslim master to call him "The Dog". No Muslim would allow anyone to call him a dog, because dogs are unclean animals. Off would come the head.

2. Snay bin Wazir.... Snay is a Muslim name? A "wasir"is an administrative title, not a name.

3. Tippu Tib actually existed in the 19th century and was a mass-murdering businessman who made his fortune in the elephant-tooth trade, in part with the support of Belgian interests in the Congo. Here he resurfaces as Tippu Tip helping his master in the wholesale slaughter of elephants. This is accomplished by driving a large herd by Alouette helicopters into a pre-planted minefield - what a delicious irony: a Francophile superhero on the one hand and French choppers on the other.

Every imaginable heartstring-plucking, hug-the-trees stuff is there. His "hero" has already been taken apart by other reviewers, so I abstain from judging this guaranteed sterile superman who has no soft spots or, God forbid, vices. Oh, and let's not forget the bevy of super beauties who would bring smallpox to America if it weren't for the said superhero.

Had enough yet? If you are a certified, institutionalizeable moron, you buy this book.

PS: I am getting very tired of seeing books on the market that have no value whatsoever and are printed only (so it seems) to get money from the unsuspecting public in order to fatten the purses of some publisher/editors son-in-laws or cousins. Sad state of affairs in the publishing business.



1 out of 5 stars Totally disappointed!   November 22, 2004
 14 out of 17 found this review helpful

I also bought this book based on Glenn Beck's hype of it and am now considering ending my Insider account with him. You can't tell me Glenn really thought this book was great. And to tell all of his listeners everyday for the last coulpe months how incredible this book is - what a joke. He's a total sell out. Maybe someone who has never read another book in their life might find these characters interesting, or the story line thrilling - but honestly it read like a bad Steven Seagal movie made into an even worse book.


5 out of 5 stars WOW!!! Couldn't put Assassin down!   July 21, 2004
 12 out of 19 found this review helpful

Assassin is even better than Bell's first book, Hawke. The events in the book have an eerie parallel to what's going on in the world today. Alex Hawke is the kind of hero you can't get out of your mind. I hope someone like him actually exists.

If you like Ludlum, Clancy, Flynn and Cussler you will really enjoy Ted Bell's writing style. His research is thorough and his characters couldn't seem more real.

Very high recommendation.



4 out of 5 stars James Bond on Steroids   September 14, 2004
 12 out of 21 found this review helpful

Alex Hawke is everyone's kind of hero. Titled, English, fearless, brave, accomplished (fly a plane, drive a boat, excellent marksman, among other things) a lady's man, a man's man. The total package. This was my first exposure to him and I found it entertaining and worthwhile. A great plot to bring the US to it's knees is the central theme of this book. The villains in it are top drawer also and the plan seems foolproof as it is revealed. If you don't mind your heros arriving with a bit of hyperbole this is a fun read with a lot of action, intrigue and of course, the male-female overtones. I liked it.

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