The Mop
by David M. Salkin
Published by (date): iUniverse (March 2009)
ISBN: 1-69836-375-6
Price: $28.28
Tags: Thriller
THE MOP begins with a series of attacks on American soil by a new
Muslim villain set on out-doing Osama Bin Laden. The US President and
his team race to discover where and when the next bombing will take
place. It’s up to a small top secret group to do America’s dirty
work and stop the bad guys before the country is destroyed. The result
is enough to scare the pants off just about anyone who picks up this
novel.
The book is compelling and the reader will race through the material in
one or two sittings. Most of the characters are thinly drawn and
hard to like. However, the story is plot driven and the cast is too vast
to develop easily. Salkin would need a TV mini-series to do that.
However, he employs a clever technique to make it all work – he uses the
“ripped from the headlines” approach that allows the imagination to fill
in the blanks. Omar Haq is the epitome of American ideas about
hypocritical Arabic terrorists – and then some. Politicians act like
politicians who must answer to a divided and frightened nation. The
intelligence agencies and the military do their jobs with great skill.
The unknown agents who go alone into danger are heroic and isolated. The
SEALS act like SEALS, Sea Captains are crotchety and defiant, and in the
end … well, I won’t tell you about the ending
The cover on this book is creative. A mop and a rifle – rendered in
grayscale with a touch of bloody red -- foreshadow the content of the
book and encourage passersby to pick it up and flip through the pages.
THE MOP puts the reader in a bad spot – no one wants to believe the
horrible situations created by the author. The violence is brutal and
ugly to behold – like “24” on steroids. On the other hand, it’s a
difficult book to put down. Perhaps we want to believe that there
is someone out there who can duke it out with the bad guys – and we
don’t have to know about their awful deeds or worry about their safety.
They are guardian ghosts that move among us unseen.
David Salkin is a solid, technical writer. Fans of the Thriller genre
will enjoy the ride – so will anyone who likes a fast-paced, readable
novel on a lazy afternoon. A word of caution – the antics of Omar Haq
will disgust and appall most everyone – men, women, Muslim, Christian,
Jewish, left or right. He’s that good old fashion villain that
everyone loves to hate. However, if you are squeamish, this might
not be the book for you.
Review by Joyce Faulkner, MWSA President & Reviewer (July 2009)