5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
How Can a Hit Man Retire?, Feb 19 2008
By Donald Mitchell "Jesus Loves You!" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Who is Conrad Hirst?: A Novel (Paperback)
Imagine that you suffer a great loss of a loved one. Your first reaction is numbness: To feel something, you join a war. That experience brutalizes you so that killing soon means nothing. Not surprisingly, you become a hired killer working for a German gangster.
But something happens during your last hit that makes you want to retire. As far as you know, only four people know you are an assassin. Why not eliminate those four and retire to live a better life?
That's the purpose of Conrad Hirst at age 32, after a decade of killing. But Hirst finds that things are not as they seem . . . and everything changes.
This premise is a very interesting one for such a book. I rated the premise as a five. Unfortunately, the resolution of the premise isn't very credible, palatable, or interesting. I rated the execution of that premise as a two. The average is a three.
The author holds back a surprise that's very easy to anticipate but that is intended to be a big revelation. I think the story would have worked better if this revelation had come at the beginning of the book.
I felt that the book's gratuitous killing made me feel dirty. That's not an experience I had hoped to gain by reading this book.
Unless you are desperately hungry for a Jason Bourne-like book that's not nearly as well done, I suggest you skip this book.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
More quality from Wignall, Jan 22 2008
By London Reader - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Who is Conrad Hirst?: A Novel (Paperback)
As per usual (which is not a negative), Wignall delivers tight, sparse fare that bowls along handsomely without indulgence or distraction. His determination to focus on his protagonists' minds, rather than their hardware (as so many do), elevates the work from workaday to thought-provoking.
Sure, the wont of fieldcraft may irk; but it's soon forgotten and we continually wonder how Hirst will extricate himself from his predicament. The plot twist toward the end is effective and, for my part, unforeseen.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Exit Plan, Dec 28 2007
By Gloria Feit - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Who is Conrad Hirst?: A Novel (Paperback)
The reader first meets Conrad Hirst at a point when he has been a hired killer for ten years [he is now 32 years old], having killed, by his best estimation, dozens of men and three women. Something about his last "assignment" has filled him with revulsion for what he has become, and he vows to end that persona immediately. He converses in his head with his lost love, Anneke, who died in the war in Yugoslavia from which he ran after her death, straight into his "profession." But now, "the Klemperer job changed everything--he understood that now. Perhaps for the first time ever, as much as Conrad tried to suppress it, he feared what he didn't know about the world, and most of all, he feared what he didn't know about himself."
Accomplishing this will be no easy task, and he determines that in order to erase who he is, there must be four final killings: Frank, his handler; Fabio, his document forger; Freddie, his arms dealer; and Julius Eberhardt, his employer, the German crime boss who had hired him all those years ago. He feels he needs to leave "with the right blood on his hands." The first of these is done easily, and he shoots Frank. But before he dies, Frank utters these words: "I lied..." About what? "Everything." He gets an inkling of the meaning of these cryptic words when he soon approaches Eberhardt to kill him, and is aghast to see that Eberhardt is not the man who hired him as his personal assassin a decade earlier. It is obvious that the first thing he must do is find out the identity of the man for whom he has been killing people. But then others start dying. And his new priority, beyond reinventing himself and leaving the killing behind, is to discover who is now doing the killing, before he himself becomes a victim.
The author, born in Belgium and now living in England, with this, his fourth mystery novel, has created a fascinating protagonist with whom the reader cannot help but feel sympathy. Well, almost. The book is well-written, filled with surprises and suspense, and is recommended