A Mysterious Review of …
Arctic Fire by Stephen W. Frey.
Review summary: This stand-alone thriller is replete with electrifying characters and breath-taking action sequences, with a storyline that follows a man trying to find out what happened to his younger brother in a world of shadowy government figures, whose motives aren't always clear despite their professed objectives. (Click here for text of full review.)
Our rating:
Arctic Fire
Stephen W. Frey
Thomas & Mercer (October 2012)
Publisher synopsis: Troy Jensen could do it all: he conquered the Seven Summits, sailed solo around the world twice, and even fought a bull in a Mexican slum on a dare. So when word comes that a rogue wave has swept Troy off a crab fishing boat in the Bering Sea and into a watery grave, his brother, Jack, doesn't buy it.
Against his better judgment, Jack decides to quit his job as a Wall Street trader and head to Dutch Harbor, Alaska, to investigate. Minutes after revealing his plan in his father's New York City office, Jack is nearly run down in the street. He doesn't think much of it at the time, but as he digs deeper into Troy's disappearance, Jack unearths information about RED-CELL-SEVEN (RCS), a super-secret American intelligence group that has operated for forty years in almost total secrecy and with complete impunity—and its leaders intend to keep it that way at any cost.
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