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Recoil | 
| Author: Andy Mcnab Publisher: Corgi Books, London Category: Book
List Price: £6.99 Buy New: £5.00 You Save: £1.99 (28%)
New (43) Used (74) from £0.01
Avg. Customer Rating: 17 reviews Sales Rank: 8061
Media: Mass Market Paperback Pages: 528 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 6.9 x 4.2 x 1.3
ISBN: 055215377X EAN: 9780552153775 ASIN: 055215377X
Publication Date: June 18, 2007 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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| Customer Reviews: Read 12 more reviews...
Gripping stuff October 7, 2008 Recoil is well up to the standard of fast action thriller that we have come to expect from McNab. Other authors may be better writers but within the limited field that he knows and sticks to he is undoubtedly a master. For my taste, as in many of his other novels, he overdoes the amount of fine technical detail to the point where it interferes with the pace of the story but I realise that this is something many other readers enjoy. This is gripping stuff and a compelling read.
McNab again, but no bad thing. August 9, 2008 I've read the majority of the McNab production line and this is more of the same. The question isn't really whether this book is any good, but more, do you enjoy McNab books?
It tells a story of kids forced into fighting in Africa, scatters in a few morals, some revenge and a love interest. Standard fodder for McNab. The tale is fairly slow to start and there are some fairly obvious appearances later in the story, you can see them coming and it appears to be a trade off between continuity in the series of Stone tales and making the book stand on it's own merits.
If you like McNab, you'll like this, guns, violence and enough special forces references for armchair action fans. If you are new to McNab it's an engaging enough thriller with some page turning action / suspense sequences.
I've only given it three stars as whilst it's a readable story, it doesn't really break the mould and the stories are becoming a bit manufactured for my liking.
Different but very good January 21, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Something has changed - the editor?
The language is a bit different, the style is different, etc. A story of a battle in details. But very well written and gripping. I finally spent the whole night just to get to the end. The end again is also a bit surprising.
The usual for McNab attention to details, the hero who isn't really a hero (makes a lot of mistakes), interesting characters, etc. The story develops, is fast and dramatic.
Recommended. I loved it.
The worst Nick Stone novel yet. August 5, 2007 6 out of 10 found this review helpful
After reading all the other reviews I was extremely dissapointed to discover "Recoil" is in fact the worst (by miles) McNab book to date.
Since the sublime "Remote Control", McNabs books have steadily decreased in quality. This is especially apparent when he puts in a kind of romantic story (like he has done previously in "Last Light") that all the gritty drama disappears. Yes, there is action and violence in this, but it is all very straight forward. Previous stories seemed to have more edge and you would will Nick Stone on, hoping that he succeeds. Now he goes all the way to Africa to see his girlfriend and that is not what I expect from Nick Stone! Now I know these tough characters need a human side to them to allow readers to identify with them, but this was ridiculous.
I said after reading "Last Light" I wouldn't read anymore Nick Stone novels but I ended up sticking with them. Sadly, "Recoil" is just so poor I honestly dont think I will be reading the next one. The story is just boring and if McNab wants to go down a more political route, then I suggest he invents a new character, and lets Nick Stone live happily ever after in wedded bliss somewhere.
Blood and guts June 9, 2007 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
The only McNab I had read before this was his first biographical book which I enjoyed as the story of a very brave if not an attractive man. Stone, Mcnab's hero has his unattractive side too but beneath the tough soldier's exterior it seems there is a soft heart too. I think what you get with McNab is very much a reflection of the author himself. You sense he has used all these weapons.he is an expert in the field not in mere theory. he is not though an expert in personal relationships, except for soldier to soldier.
It is a gripping read set in the darkest heart of Africa. It is one long battle to survive against the odds and not many do. There is much blood and more use of the f word than I like to read but I guess that is the language of the ex-S.A.S. and their ilk. A happy if unrealistic ending. The romantic comes out in the author in the end.
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