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Commander
 
 

Commander (Hardcover)

by Patrick Davis (Author) "IT WAS ANOTHER MUGGY SUMMER EVENING IN SONGtan, South Korea, and industrial city roughly sixty miles south of Seoul, and I was playing salesman in..." (more)
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Davis's fourth novel is a chilling murder mystery set in Song-tan, South Korea, where racism, danger and corruption abound. Former air force criminal investigator Maj. Burt Webber is now a civilian living with his wife, Chung-hee, helping her run a jewelry store in the seedy bar district near a U.S. air base. He has resigned from the air force in disgust after a flap with his general over his own marriage to a foreign national. When a local bar girl is brutally murdered in a ritzy apartment, Burt's old pal, Col. Ray Johnson, asks him to help solve the crime. Strings are pulled to get him back on the job, but none of his superiors' assurances add up and he is not even sure who he is working for. Burt and his new partner, Lt. Susan Torres, a tough military cop, work closely with Sammy, a Korean police detective who has learned most of his English from American action movies. They believe that American and Korean officials want the case solved, but there's a stink of cover-up and conspiracy after all, who really cares about another dead bar girl? Even Ray lies through his teeth, and it takes a while for Burt to realize he's been had. The truth is, nobody wants the murder solved, and Burt is just an expendable patsy in a game of geopolitics where saving face and promoting business are most important. Davis (The Colonel) combines convincing police procedure with plenty of head-scratching clues, twists and dead ends. His portrayal of South Korean culture is vivid and revealing, a superb backdrop for a bona fide thriller.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist

Davis' fourth thriller set in the world of the military--following The Colonel (2001)--is, as usual, a crafty, detail-rich mystery with plenty of atmosphere. His latest, set in South Korea, stars Major Burton Webber, an air force investigator who resigned his commission to go to work in his Korean wife's jewelry store. When he reluctantly agrees to take on a particularly delicate investigation--someone has murdered a beautiful woman who may have high-level connections--he's forced to put his own life on the line. The plot is fairly traditional, but Davis works enough variations on the theme to make it seem fresh again. His deft characterizations (he can tell us a lot about someone in very few words) keep us engaged, and his smooth storytelling allows him to keep crucial details secret until they sneak up on us and whack us over the head. Davis (a former major in the air force) has yet to write a "great" military thriller, but he's pushing "very good" to its limit. David Pitt
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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IT WAS ANOTHER MUGGY SUMMER EVENING IN SONGtan, South Korea, and industrial city roughly sixty miles south of Seoul, and I was playing salesman in my wife's jewelry store located in the Ville, the GI term for the ten square blocks of shops, bars, and whorehouses outside the main gate of Osan Air Base. Read the first page
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7 Reviews
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4.9 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars In Command of His Story, Aug 18 2003
By Kevin Tipple (Plano, Texas) - See all my reviews
Justice, racism and family honor all play key roles in this intriguing mystery by Patrick Davis. The author returns again in his fourth book to his military experiences. Much like the other three, this novel features constant action, intriguing and complicated characters and a mystery full of twists and turns to the very last page.

As the novel opens, Major Burton Webber is no longer a member of the Air Force and is content to help his Korean wife run her jewelry store. At one time he was Chief of the Osan Air Base (South Korea) office of Special Investigations. But office politics runs everything, especially the military, and he was wrongfully passed over for promotion. Now the Air Force wants him back ostensibly because he is the best at what he does.

The Air Force has a politically sensitive problem in a region that now wants Americans to pull out of their bases and go home. An Amerasian bar girl (prostitute) has been brutally murdered and it may have been at the hands of an American service person. If true, it comes on the heels of other recent events in the region and could be the final push for the Americans to go home. Supposedly, General Muller (responsible for the pass over in promotion) wants Webber to come in and investigate the case and find the guilty party and wrap everything up as fast as possible.

While Webber does not buy into the situation as described, it is a chance for him to do what he really likes to do and so he agrees. Webber begins to run the investigation and isn't surprised when the investigation begins to run into political roadblocks. As everyone around him seems to lie to him, he continues to work the case and begins to find the clues that will lead him to the killers. His problem is that as his suspect list shortens, the clues seem to be leading him toward those closest to him.

As in his other books, Patrick Davis once again writes another tightly plotted mystery. The action flows steadily throughout the novel and the reader is constantly misdirected as the investigation proceeds forward. His characters are complex and human and he shows a real talent for bringing the reader into his world. Simply put: another great read.

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5.0 out of 5 stars A book that flows to the readers with ease, April 24 2003
By A. T. DAMICO (Painesville, Ohio USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
The Commander was an excellent read. Not very many books are written in a first-person format, but it is a great way to write. The story is first-rate, with compelling, believable characters.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Pretty Good Military Thriller!, April 10 2003
By fjmcmm (Gardena, CA USA) - See all my reviews
Once again, Mr Davis has written a pretty good novel of crime in the military. That being said, it lost my interest at times, but I still had to know how it would end and I wasn't disappointed. Looking forward to his next novel.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Page-Turner
"The Commander" is truly an excellent piece of suspense and mystery writing. Set in Korea, a man passed up for promotion by the military is called back on the job to solve the... Read more
Published on Jan 12 2003 by George Buttner

5.0 out of 5 stars The Commander
Patrick A. Davis' books in the past have been incredible. He takes us on rollercoaster rides anywhere from homicide to frame-work. Read more
Published on Dec 28 2002 by lil_dusty_2002

5.0 out of 5 stars Too Bad It could not be 6 stars
This book is the best, Mr. Davis knows all about Military life .
He writes only l book a year so it is always great. Read more
Published on Aug 10 2002 by Carole Witzig

5.0 out of 5 stars excellent military thriller
He is now a salesman in his wife's jewelry store located in the red light district of Song-lan, South Korea, but once he was career military at the Osan Air Base. Read more
Published on Jul 22 2002 by Harriet Klausner

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