Ex-KOP | |||||
Warren Hammond | |||||
Tor, 315 pages | |||||
A review by Michael M Jones
Juno flatly refuses to be part of any attempts to clean up the system.
He's been there, done that, and has the scars to prove it. But he gladly takes the money to investigate a
horrible series of murders, in which people are being brutally tortured and killed. Juno suspects that
offworlders are involved, which is never a good sign. After all, offworlders mean nothing but trouble. And
the deeper Juno gets in this case, the more he gets sucked back into a world of corruption, treachery, abuse
and danger. Because now he's gained the attention of Maggie's new partner, a steroid-abusing monster
named Ian Davies, and his band of vicious cronies, some of the worst cops in the city. Now Juno's playing
a dangerous game for survival, trying to keep Ian from killing Maggie or himself while he gathers the
information he needs, the information which will crack this case once and for all. But with Juno's wife
in the hospital, his greatest weakness lies exposed, just when he needs to be at his hardest. On Koba,
it's damned hard to be a good person. Luckily, Juno Mozambe is anything but good.
Ex-KOP is a dirty, gritty, squalid story, noir carried over into a science fiction setting. On Koba,
it's always raining, and the dichotomy between the haves and have-nots is in sharp evidence. It's a brutal
little bit of civilization carved out of an uncaring jungle, and the author goes all out to evoke that sense
of darkness and ugliness all around. Juno is the sort of hero the setting deserves, a brutal thug beaten
down by time and circumstances, fiercely clinging to the few points of light in an otherwise bleak
existence, attempting to believe in something that will make it all worthwhile in the end.
Outgunned, outnumbered, and an easy target for the younger, nastier crowd that has sprung up as he has aged,
he has to fall back on cunning and experience, rather than brute force and a gun. And yet he never gives
up, not entirely, even as things really get bad.
This is not a pretty, shiny, feel-good book. It's very much the story of a struggle for dominance and
the fight to maintain some small sense of decency when it has been just about beaten out of everyone. It's
a two-fisted murder mystery with noir sensibilities, a high-tech ambience and a science fiction setting,
and a hell of a read. It's certainly not for everyone, especially the squeamish, but Warren Hammond
really does a good job of telling the story at hand, and I'll definitely be picking up the next in
the series. Do keep in mind that this is a sequel to his first book, KOP, so start there if you get the chance.
Michael M Jones enjoys an addiction to books, for which he's glad there is no cure. He lives with his very patient wife (who doesn't complain about books taking over the house... much), eight cats, and a large plaster penguin that once tasted blood and enjoyed it. A prophecy states that when Michael finishes reading everything on his list, he'll finally die. He aims to be immortal. |
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