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The first order  Cover Image Book Book

The first order / Jeff Abbott.

Abbott, Jeff, (author.).

Summary:

"Two brothers. One dead, executed by extremists on a grainy video. The other forged into a top undercover agent. But now, Sam Capra has reason to believe that his brother, Danny, may be alive. And if Danny has been living a secret life these past years, where has he been--and what has he become? Sam's desperate search for his brother leads him into a modern heart of darkness: the Russian elite inner circle, a group of ruthless ex-KGB billionaires who owe fealty to Russia's corrupt president, Morozov. One of these men wants Morozov dead. And Danny will be the one to kill him--on American soil. To save his brother--and to save the world from certain war--Sam, along with his mysterious partner, Mila, must stop Danny from killing Morozov. The mission will take Sam from the slums of Pakistan to the hipster galleries of Brooklyn to the Caribbean playgrounds of the superrich. And as Sam untangles the secret past locked in his brother's heart, he may be forced to make a choice between his brother--and the greater good..."--From publisher.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781455558414 (hardcover)
  • ISBN: 9781455558421 (mass market paperback)
  • Physical Description: 391 pages ; 24 cm
  • Edition: First edition.
  • Publisher: New York : Grand Central Publishing, 2016.
Subject: Intelligence officers > Fiction.
Assassins > Fiction.
Brothers > Fiction.
Genre: Suspense fiction.
International thriller.

Available copies

  • 14 of 15 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 2 of 3 copies available at Sechelt/Gibsons.
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Sechelt Public Library. (Show preferred library)

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 15 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Sechelt Public Library F ABBO (Text) 3326000373890 Fiction Volume hold Available -
Gibsons Public Library FIC ABBO (Text) 30886001013826 Adult Fiction Hardcover Volume hold Checked out 2024-04-25
Gibsons Public Library PB A (Text) 30886000640348 Adult Fiction paperback Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2015 December #2
    In the fifth Sam Capra thriller, the American intelligence agent is shocked to discover that his brother, whom he watched (via videotape) being murdered, may be alive. Not only that, but he just might be an assassin-for-hire whose latest assignment is to kill the Russian president. Can Sam save the president and his brother, or will he have to sacrifice one to save the other? Fast paced and just plausible enough to satisfy readers who demand realism in their adrenaline-fueled thrillers, the book should definitely appeal to action fans. Each novel in the series can be read as a stand-alone, which means newcomers can plunge right in. Go for it. Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2016 January
    Whodunit: A gun just waiting to go off

    Fuminori Nakamura's The Gun could very well open with the staccato notes of the theme to Rod Serling's "The Twilight Zone." Picture, if you will, a rainy night in Tokyo. A bedraggled walker on an urban river pathway comes upon an inert form on the ground, the head encircled by a pool of congealed blood. A .357 Magnum is found nearby, one spent shell in the chamber. Japan is a remarkably gun-free country, so it's a heady experience indeed for average guy Nishikawa to be in possession of this deadly weapon—a weapon with (count 'em) four bullets remaining. No matter that he's begun to have feelings for a beautiful young woman, it's the gun that occupies virtually all of his waking thoughts. The psychological downward spiral into obsession is what drives this book, and during my reading, I couldn't help but think that Alfred Hitchcock could have created a brilliant film adaptation.

    LEGENDARY ASSASSIN
    One of the great setups for a suspense novel is the premise of an off-the-books loner, a modern-day Robin Hood who battles injustice anonymously (or at least with little fanfare), under the radar of the law. John D. MacDonald's Travis McGee is one; Andrew Vachss' Burke is another; Lee Child's Jack Reacher is a third. Add to this elite group Evan Smoak, the "Nowhere Man" of Gregg Hurwitz's new thriller, Orphan X. Trained from childhood as a plausibly deniable intelligence agent, Smoak learned skills that would serve his masters well: espionage, betrayal and assassination. What they didn't factor into the equation is that Smoak might use these skills to distance himself from the program and disappear like smoke. And that he would reappear as the legendary Nowhere Man, a hired gun that's extraordinarily difficult to engage, but once engaged, is a worthy adversary to pretty much any opposing team. Smoak's life is turned upside down when he becomes the prey of an enforcer whose skills are very much on par with his own. Readers can expect nonstop relentless action, très cinématique—speaking of which, it has already been optioned for a film by Warner Bros.

    A FAMILY MATTER
    The bond between brothers can be one of the most durable on the face of the earth, so it was truly horrific for CIA agent Sam Capra to watch the execution of his brother, Danny, which was captured on video by the terrorists allegedly responsible. As Jeff Abbott's The First Order opens, half a dozen years have passed since Danny's untimely death, but the pain is still lodged deep in Capra's psyche, a thorn that cannot be removed. Capra is an ex-CIA agent now, but old skills die hard, and when he gets some evidence that his brother's death may have been faked, it's a straw he will grasp at with every fiber of his being. Trouble is, the same evidence suggests that Danny has gone on to become one of the world's premier contract killers, and that he's plotting the murder of the president of Russia. If he's successful, the repercussions could be global and monumental, so Capra launches a one-man crusade to deter his brother from completing this ill-advised mission. This is a thoroughly riveting addition to one of the most compelling espionage series in modern fiction.

    TOP PICK IN MYSTERY
    I've always admired HÃ¥kan Nesser's suspense series featuring now-retired detective Van Veeteren, in part because the books are reminiscent of Ed McBain's 87th Precinct novels. Both feature a dry sort of humor that is intelligent and appealing, and they're both set in fictitious locations (in Nesser's case, Maardam) that bear a marked resemblance to real-world cities but still allow the authors to tweak the milieu to suit the narrative. Although the setting is somewhere in continental Europe, Nesser's dialogue is very English in tone (and I mean good English, like Ruth Rendell or Reginald Hill, thanks to the very capable translation work of Laurie Thompson). In Hour of the Wolf, cop-turned-antiquarian-bookseller Van Veeteren's son has turned up murdered, and he becomes very involved (perhaps too involved) in the investigation. But Van Veeteren is something of a latecomer to this story; the early chapters focus on the cover-up of a vehicular homicide, set against the contrapuntal narrative of the Maardam police department running a murderer to ground. Hour of the Wolf was first published in Swedish in 1999 (as Carambole), and it's taken far too long to reach our shores (must have gotten lost in the U.S. mail). Like all the Van Veeteren novels, it was worth the wait.

     

    This article was originally published in the January 2015 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.

    Copyright 2012 BookPage Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2015 December #1
    An epic struggle between two brothers throws Russian-American relations in jeopardy during this strong installment of Abbott's series (Inside Man, 2014, etc.) featuring ex-CIA sleuth Sam Capra. Just when Capra is sure he's about to retire, he gets word that his brother, Danny, thought to have been beheaded in a terrorist video, may still be alive. He doesn't yet know that Danny, now known as Philip Judge, has become a killer for hire who's just taken on his biggest assignment, executing the president of Russia for $20 million. Both brothers wind up infiltrating the circle of Russian billionaires who've landed in Miami. To stop Danny from carrying out the execution, Sam needs to find the identity of Firebird, the president's associate who commissioned the hit. Sam is helped considerably by his ability to attract women: he charms hard-partying Russian celebrity Katya Kirova and falls into a sexual affair with Irina Belinskaya, the widow of a high-ranking official, whose rumored vengeance on her husband's killers has earned her the title of Russia's most dangerous woman. Meanwhile, Sam's associate, Mila, has her own reasons to find Danny and keeps her information hidden from Sam—throwing him into further danger before the brothers reach their climactic confrontation. Abbott loads his story with entertaining plot twists, not all of which make perfect sense, but the bond and betrayal between the two brothers add emotional depth to the action. Copyright Kirkus 2015 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2015 August #1

    Three-time Edgar Award nominee Abbott returns with the fifth in his high-octane, newly formatted Sam Capra series. Positioned for breakout; with a 40,000-copy first printing.

    [Page 56]. (c) Copyright 2015 Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2015 November #4

    In bestseller Abbott's fast-paced, high-octane fifth thriller featuring ex-CIA operative Sam Capra (after 2014's The Inside Man), an unnamed prospective client offers master hit man Philip Judge $20 million to pull off "the most dangerous assassination in history"—the murder of Russian president Dmitri Morozov on American soil. The job seems like an inevitable suicide mission, until Judge gets an idea from Shakespeare's Julius Caesar that would enable him to kill Morozov and live to enjoy the payday. Meanwhile, Sam desperately searches for his younger brother, Danny, who was supposedly murdered in the Hindu Kush six years earlier by a group calling itself the Brothers of the Mountain. Sam, who finds evidence that Danny's death was staged, turns for help to his former colleagues in the Round Table, "a secret alliance that... tried to be a force for good in the world." Abbott offers plenty of twists, though genre readers will find little that's new, and Sam isn't the most memorable series lead. Author tour. Agent: Peter Ginsberg, Curtis Brown. (Jan.)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2015 PWxyz LLC

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