From Publishers Weekly
In his debut, espionage novelist Blackthorn ("the pseudonym of a political figure," according to the publisher) turns to Cuba, the vestigial remaining turf of the Cold War, to try to cook up some credible spy suspense. As Jan. 1, 1999, approaches, the 40th anniversary of the Cuban revolution, a group of exiled terrorists plots to blow up Castro and his attendant public masses with a thermonuclear warheadAone conveniently left over from 1962's Cuban missile crisis. Two warheads were stashed away by a rogue Russian, whose son is now peddling them. American scholar McLemore stumbles across the scheme while doing historical research. His local guide, Trinidad, "a disdainfully attractive woman," is an undercover intelligence operative who will eventually help him save the day. The plot is stretched pretty thin, especially in its abridged audio incarnation, and lacks any pull of real suspense. Reader Perez, while bringing Latin flavor to his character voices, strains with the overbaked material. Based on the 1998 Morrow hardcover. (Feb.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews
Castro-haters plot to nuke Fidel in this less-than-explosive suspenser. They also plan to pulverize along with him hundreds of thousands of others, employing as their weapon a lost nuclear warhead left behind by the Russians in 1962. Self-styled Bravos, the terrorists are Cuban exiles fixated on revenge. The plan is to detonate the bomb in mid-Havana on January 1, 1999, the 40th anniversary of the Cuban revolution, and the fact that a good many of those blown to bits with Castro will be babies doesn't rate a Bravo eye blink. For a while, only one man stands in their way. The unlikely stopgap is an American historian named McLemore, in Cuba on a research grant. In a desultory way he's re-examining the Cuban missile crisis, hoping for an overlooked nugget to revive an academic career in decline. Enter the beautiful and enigmatic Trinidad. Ostensibly, she's a government guide. Actually, she's a highly placed member of Cuban intelligence. In ways ever available to the beautiful and enigmatic heroines of suspense fiction, she galvanizes McLemore, converting him from a burnt-out case to a live-wire. It's McLemore who works it out that the Bravos have latched onto the nuke. It's McLemore who locates the whereabouts of the missing warhead. And it's McLemore who manages to convince the CIA and Cuban intelligence that after years of double-crossing each other they have much to gain from playing it straight. When at length McLemore and Trinidad yield to their mutual passion, few readers will be surprised. Nor will they be taken unawares when in the last nanosecond of countdown, the good guys catch up with the bad guys and neutralize the nuke. Blackthorn, we're told, is the pseudonym for ``an internationally known political figure.'' And he does seem comfortable with his backgrounds. What he lacks is the savvy storyteller's abililty to invent people who can make the backgrounds come alive. --
Copyright ©1998, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.