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Dark Justice [Paperback]

Jack Higgins
1.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: HarperCollins; First Edition edition (16 Aug 2004)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0007127227
  • ISBN-13: 978-0007127221
  • Product Dimensions: 23 x 14.8 x 3.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 1.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,720,038 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Jack Higgins
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Product Description

Review

‘Open a Jack Higgins novel and you'll encounter a master craftsman at the peak of his powers … first-rate tales of intrigue, suspense and full-on action.’
Sunday Express

‘Higgins is a master of his craft.’
Daily Telegraph

‘A thriller writer in a class of his own.’
Financial Times

‘The master craftsman of good, clean adventure.’
Daily Mail

Review

'Open a Jack Higgins novel and you'll encounter a master craftsman at the peak of his powers ... first-rate tales of intrigue, suspense and full-on action.' Sunday Express 'Higgins is a master of his craft.' Daily Telegraph 'A thriller writer in a class of his own.' Financial Times 'The master craftsman of good, clean adventure.' Daily Mail

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First Sentence
Manhattan on a dark November evening around eight o'clock was bleak and uninviting, an east wind driving heavy rain before it, as Henry Morgan turned the corner of a side Street into Park Avenue. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
Over the years most of Jack Higgins'novels have given me many hours of happy and exciting reading. However, in recent times Mr Higgins appears to have got into a rut with his Sean Dillon character. Dark Justice I regret to say is simply a slight variation and I mean a very slight variation on the last 3 or 4 novels involving Dillon. The novel contains nothing new and in my opinion it is a waste of money especially if you have read anyone of the following books The Edge of Danger, Day of Reckoning or Midnight Runner. Its time Mr Higgins laid Sean to rest and gave his readers some value for money.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
By Donald Mitchell HALL OF FAME TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
If you read either Bad Company or Midnight Runner, this book will seem familiar to you. A new man, Josef Belov, has stepped into the Rashid holdings after Baron von Berger died in a plane crash, and provides a new source of villainy aimed at the Middle East oil fields. The money and the background this time are Russian, and you will feel at times as though you are back in the Cold War as well as up against the IRA.

As the book opens, a terrorist assassin named Henry Morgan stalks the U.S. president. The trail the assassin leaves behind leads to a mosque in London and suggests a wider terror network aimed at destabilizing Iraq.

While consulting with the president, General Charles Ferguson leads a counter attack to locate the terrorist organization and to stop it. As usual, Ferguson relies heavily on Sean Dillon, Major Roper, Hannah Bernstein and Dillon's allies, the Salters.

The opposition draws heavily on experienced Russian intelligence personnel who are now freelancing, as well as other freelance operatives.

Soon Ferguson and the opposition are well aware of one another and are racing to gain strategic advantages. Along the way, there are lots of threats, bragging and by-play. Every 40 pages or so, there's a brief violent confrontation. This conflict is enhanced by Belov's antipathy towards Ferguson and his team.

The backdrop of the story is more interesting than many of Mr. Higgins's thrillers. There are cameo appearances by world leaders and lots of references to the antiterrorist methods now being used in the U.K. The book gently raises the question about whether the antiterrorist forces should have unrestrained authority or not . . . and seems to suggest that they should.

As usual, character development is minimal and ideas are few and far between. But if you like having gun battles every so often in your stories, this book will do just as well as any other gun-filled thriller.

As for writing style, some will find this book a little too spare in its descriptions. An entire gun fight can be concluded in a handful of paragraphs.

May you live with love and in peace.

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15 of 18 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
The main problem with this novel is that if you're a Higgins fan then you've read it before.

It's a lacklustre half hearted re hash of the Rashid novel,"Edge of Danger", and a few others, like "midnight runner" . It even tells you in the opening pages of the main baddie, Belov, buying the Rashid's assets and property as if he is forewarning the reader of what to expect.

It has the same meeting of the bad guy's at a formal function. The same frank exchange of what each knows about the other. The same bad guy's where one believes Dillion can't be as bad as they say, with ridiculous implausible underestimation of him, whilst another pays him homage to impress the reader by re-hashing his previous exploits via the "file" on him. The same recruitment of old IRA comrades of Dillion's who suitably hero worship him, but will try to kill him for the sake of the "game". Even the anti climatic ending is in a country manor/ castle, with Dillon and Billy Slater parachuting in at low level, on the rush, going against greater odds who are waiting for him at the manor.

However what is very noticeably different about this novel, is that although it feels like just a re-write of a previous novel, it lacks Mr Higgins normal drama, suspense and action packed thrills. Its as though Mr Higgins was bored with it too and rushed it without thought or effort. It lacks Dillions normal flair, there are no instances where Dillion amazes you, or stuns you with his gentle romantic demeanour, bursting into deadly action of epic proportions. Despite being a Dillion book there are only two action scenes involving him, so under played, lacking in suspense, drama or significant action that you wonder why Mr Higgins even bothered to include them. The second of them is the end show down, which is the worst part of the book. Its ridiculously easy, it ends in a few pages of none action, and the potential showdown of deadly proportions that you anticipate doesn't happen. In one paragraph the ultimate bad guy, the one you expect to give Dillion a run for his money say's lets leg it (one man dead only) then in one sentence he's made it from the manor, across the fields and onto a boat that Dillion simply blows up. As a reader you feel cheated.

The only thing you remember about this book is Mr Higgins stressing over and over that terrorist's post 9/11 should be disposed of by any means. That England and America should do absolutely whatever it takes to bring them down and suspend all rights laws or moral considerations in order to do so at any cost. One wonders if this is truly a Dillion fictional Novel, or if its Mr Higgins platform to shout his opinions regarding Terrorism and anti-terrorism at the powers that be and the world at large. Certainly he makes no effort to provide a thrilling ride of suspense and drama, whilst stresses again and again from various viewpoints his beliefs in regards to how anti-terrorism should be fought. He even throws in the token nod to the moral considerations of removing human rights and laws from the equation in the form of Hannah Berstein's conscience, stressing her position on law via her position as superintendent for special branch and morals via her grandfather the Rabbi. But straight away Mr Higgins stresses that its her feelings or emotions that cry out for due process, the law and human rights and her intellect telling her that it should be ignored to do what must be done. He even has a priest from the church of England giving her moral advise that due process of the law needs to be suspended to fight terrorism. (Ignoring the fact that she's jewish) I'm not saying I'm against this view point, but if Mr Higgins felt so strongly that he needed to write a novel to air his views he could have at least spent as much time and effort on the novel itself. At least that way may be more people would read it.

I feel compelled to say that I'm a die hard Jack Higgins fan and owner of all his Novels to date. Normally Mr Higgins provides flair, drama, suspense and thrills by the bucket loads, so I hope new readers don't judge him by this book alone.

If you've not read a Jack Higgins novel before, then this is an okay novel by the standards of other novelists, but if you have then this is deeply, deeply disappointing. For those new to Jack Higgins may I suggest you try "A prayer for the Dying", I book I have re read so often that I'm on my third battered and worn copy.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Lazy writing
I like Jack Higgins and I like the Sean Dillon character but I was disappointed with this book. If you've read any of the others that involve, the Salters, Roper, Lacy and Parry... Read more
Published 21 months ago by Grumblerif
Good Book
This book - Dark Justice - A Sean Dillon book and has all the usual characters. Is what you expect from Jack Higgins/Sean Dillon tome.
Published on 9 April 2010 by J. F. Truscott
THE LITERARY EQUIVALENT OF PAINTING BY NUMBERS
Buyer beware, this is how a lazy writer gets his money. If it took Jack Higgins longer to write than me to read I doubt there was that much in it. Read more
Published on 28 Feb 2010 by Barry McCanna
Expect disappointment!
This is another example of lazy, shallow writing from an author who is using past excellence to sell unimaginative tripe to loyal readers who have a right to expect more for their... Read more
Published on 20 Mar 2008 by F. Clarke
Ordinary
Every so often I pick up a book by my countryman Mr. Higgins to see whether he has improved. In short, he hasn't. Read more
Published on 31 July 2007 by Teemacs
Not Higgins Best Work
This is about the twelfth novel featuring Sean Dillon. Dillon and the team he belongs to are not my favourite characters. Read more
Published on 31 Dec 2006 by P.M. Wood
Lazy writing and a poor plot
This is a poor book from a previously very good author. The writing is lazy, an example of this is the way the characters have conversations with each other where they explain... Read more
Published on 31 Aug 2004
A really lazy attempt
Straight off, this is a really poor book. The characters are wooden, the dialogue weak and unconvincing and the plot is weak. Read more
Published on 25 Aug 2004
same book differnt title
When he tried jack higgins was something speical, but The egal has landed and eye of the storm this aint. Read more
Published on 8 Aug 2004 by Mr SJ Walker
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