Bloodline: A Repairman Jack Novel
Bloodline: A Repairman Jack Novel book cover

Bloodline: A Repairman Jack Novel

Price
$27.90
Format
Hardcover
Pages
384
Publisher
Forge Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0765317063
Dimensions
6.64 x 1.2 x 9.06 inches
Weight
1.35 pounds

Description

From Publishers Weekly A monstrous scheme to create an evil superman through crude efforts at gene jiggering bedevils urban mercenary Repairman Jack in his 11th outing (after 2006's Harbingers ). When Jack, a New York City paranormal fixer, agrees to help Christy Pickering break up a relationship between her 18-year-old daughter and an older man, Jerry Bethlehem, he discovers Bethlehem is a violent criminal whose past includes abortion clinic bombings and a stay at a government-funded clinic conducting DNA research. Pickering is circumspect about her own background and her daughter's paternity. When Jack probes unspoken links between Pickering and Bethlehem, his investigation intrudes inexplicably upon a shady self-help guru. Sinuous plot twists and shocking revelations abound, but Wilson manages to pull these wildly disparate plot threads together, and tie them dexterously to the series' overarching chronicle of a battle between occult forces in which Jack serves as a reluctant but responsible warrior. Like its predecessors, this novel shows why Jack's saga has become the most entertaining and dependable modern horror-thriller series. (Oct.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Praise for New York Times bestseller Harbingers : "Part hard-boiled detective novel, part "Matrix"and all fun, Wilson's latest and, perhaps, greatest kept me up all night. A pulse-pounding novel that grips you by the throat and doesn't let go even when it's over." --Eric Van Lustbader, author of The Testament "F. Paul Wilson's Repairman Jack is a cultural icon. If you haven't crossed paths with him, you're out of the loop. Get with the program." --David Morrell, author of Creepers "Provides everything that fans of this excellent and frequently horrific series have come to expect." -- Publishers Weekly F. PAUL WILSON, the New York Times bestselling author of ten previous Repairman Jack novels, is a practicing physician and lives in Wall, New Jersey. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 It was happening again . . . In the driver’s seat, hands on the steering wheel, gunning the panel truck across Second Avenue toward the blond woman and her little girl . . . . . . gaining speed . . . . . . seeing their shocked, terrified expressions as he floors the gas . . . . . . feeling the impacts as he plows into them . . . . . . watching their limp, broken bodies flying as he races past, never slowing, never hesitating, never even looking back.Jack awoke with his jaw locked and his fists clenched. He forced himself to relax, to reach out and lay a hand on the reassuring curve of Gia’s hip where she slumbered next to him.The dream again. Easy enough to interpret: He blamed himself for the hit-and-run, so his mind put him behind the wheel. Obvious.What wasn’t obvious was the timing. The dream occurred only under a certain condition: It meant the watcher was back.Jack slipped from her bed to the window. The blinds were drawn against the glow from the streetlights. He peeked around the edge and . . . There he was.As usual he stood at the corner, facing Gia’s townhouse, wearing his customary homburg and overcoat; his right hand rested on the head of a walking stick. His position silhouetted him against the lights of the traffic passing on Sutton Place and caused the brim of his hat to shadow his face.A big man and, if the slight stoop of his shoulders was any clue, elderly. Jack had first seen him outside his own apartment back in January . . . just days before the hit-and-run. And lately he’d been showing up outside Gia’s.Jack had never been able to catch the guy. Not for lack of trying. He’d gone after him dozens of times, but the old guy seemed to know when Jack was coming.Somehow the watcher always managed to stay one step ahead. If Jack waited inside the front door, dressed and ready to give chase, or sat in his car or hid in a doorway, watching the corner, the guy didn’t show. Last month Jack had waited ten nights in a row—inside and outside, from uptown, downtown, and crosstown vantage points.Nothing.On the eleventh night he called it quits and went to bed. That night he had the dream again and, sure enough, a peek through the blinds confirmed the watcher’s presence.Deciding to give it another shot, Jack grabbed his jeans and hopped into them as he headed for the hall. He hurried down to the first floor and jammed his bare feet into his sneakers where they waited in the front foyer. Then out the door in a headlong dash across the street to the corner.The empty corner.But Jack didn’t break his stride. This had happened every time—in the half minute or less it took him to reach the street the guy in the homburg disappeared. All it took was a few steps to put him around the corner and out of sight, but there was more to it.Jack reached the corner and kept going, racing along Sutton Place for a full block, peering into every nook and cranny along the way. Tonight’s attempt ended the same as all the others: nada.His breath steaming in the night air, Jack stood on the deserted sidewalk, turning in a slow circle. Where did the son of a bitch go? Maybe a sleek Olympic-class sprinter could race out of sight in that short time. But some big old guy with a cane?Didn’t make sense.But then, why should it? Nothing else did.Check that: Events of the past year did make sense, but not in the usual way. Not the sort of sense that the average person could understand—or want to.Jack rubbed his bare arms. It might be spring—mid-April—but the temperature was in the low forties. A bit cool for just a T-shirt.He took one last look around, then hurried back to Gia’s warm bed. Copyright © 2007 by F. Paul Wilson. All rights reserved. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Jack has been on hiatus since the events in
  • Harbingers
  • . With his lover Gia's encouragement he dips a toe back into the fix-it pool. Christy Pickering's eighteen-year-old daughter is dating Jerry Bethlehem, a man twice her age. Christy sensed something shady and sinister about him, so she hired a private investigator to look into his past. But the PI isn't returning her calls. Will Jack find out why? Jack learns there's a very good reason for the unreturned calls: The PI is dead, a victim of a bizarre water-torture murder. As Jack delves into Jerry Bethlehem's past he learns that the man is not who he says he is. Who--and
  • what
  • --he is will have a devastating effect on Jack's life and future, adding another piece to the puzzle of who he really is and why he's been drafted into this cosmic shadow war.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(261)
★★★★
25%
(109)
★★★
15%
(65)
★★
7%
(30)
-7%
(-30)

Most Helpful Reviews

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This series just keeps getting better

In earlier installments of this outstanding series, author F. Paul Wilson would often weave two storylines, one with a foot in the so-called real world, the other grounded in the world of the supernatural. His last two books, however, have placed more emphasis on the supernatural. In INFERNAL, Jack was stricken by a mystical malady which threatened to erase him from this plane of existence; in HARBINGERS, he was forced cut a deal with the otherworldly Ally to protect all he held dear. In BLOODLINE, Wilson switches gears a bit, grounding the story in stark, but still dangerous, reality.

Still dealing with the fallout of the harrowing events chronicled in INFERNAL and HARBINGERS, Jack accepts a job that, at least on the surface, seems just the thing to help him ease back into the repair business--he's asked by protective mother Christy Pickering to break up her teenaged daughter Dawn's relationship with Jerry Bethlehem, a much older man of questionable morals. Sounds pretty straightforward, right? Something that John D. MacDonald's quixotic Travis McGee might handle with aplomb, no doubt (Bethlehem being, in many ways, eerily reminiscent of the loathsome Junior Allen of DEEP BLUE GOODBYE fame). Of course, this being the world according to Jack, the situation is not as clear cut as it seems. Bethlehem turns out to be a hardened, dangerous criminal, released from prison because he agreed to take part in a scientific study.

Jerry, you see, is unique because his genome shows evidence of "other" or "o" DNA, a trait which causes extreme, explosive aggressiveness. The scientists studying him are fascinated by the research possibilities. Jerry, on the other hand, cares little about his genetic background--he's on a mission given to him by his psychopathic father, and his target is eighteen year old Dawn Pickering. As Jack unravels the mystery surrounding Bethlehem's twisted quest, he uncovers unsettling information that will change him forever.

As always, Wilson provides entertaining and intelligent reading--he hasn't lost his any of his edginess as the series has progressed, he's only gotten sharper and more proficient at providing shocking twists that will leave readers shaking their heads, first in utter disbelief, then in admiration. Wilson's no frills style makes him easy to underestimate as a writer, but he always delivers the goods--his annual forays into Jack's universe have become events, as his ever growing legion of fans flock to see where he's going to take them next.
23 people found this helpful
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Let It Bleed

F. Paul Wilson's Repairman Jack series is one of the most well-written and enjoyable of its type out there. For anyone who isn't familiar with it - though it is likely someone reading a review of the eleventh book in the series is - think Dashiell Hammet meets HP Lovecraft, with a lighter tone than either. (In this novel he even playfully includes a hack scifi writer named P. Frank Winslow as a minor character.) Wilson maintains his usual readable standards in Bloodline, with the basis for the next sequel, also as usual, laid out in the last chapter.

Jack, an urban mercenary of sorts, but one who is selective about his clients and methods, takes on an apparently simple case; once again, and not as a coincidence, it blows up into something involving unseen forces - not quite supernatural in the usual sense, but otherworldly nonetheless.

All in all, this is a solid addition to the series. However, though I have no wish to deprive Mr. Wilson of a future downpayment on a beach house on the Jersey shore (and Jack is his creation to do with as he likes), as a reader I am at the point similar to an hour into a monster movie when, as viewer, I am getting impatient for the big lizard to rise out of the sea and trash Tokyo already. A storm has been building in the last few Repairman Jack novels. I await the author's unleashing of it, even though that probably means wrapping up the series.
7 people found this helpful
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Another haunting adventure for Repairman Jack

The eleventh book in the Repairman Jack series is another excellent, haunting thriller that will doubtless impress this cult favorite's many fans. Jack, the ultimate urban fix-it man, uncovers a plot to "rehabilitate" violent criminals by tinkering with their DNA. At the same time, he runs into the followers of a shady self-help guru with plans for world domination. Could these two plot threads be related? (Ya think?) This is not the easiest series to pick up if you haven't read the earlier books. But if you haven't, you should, because Wilson is one of the best.
7 people found this helpful
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Author fatigue?

I read the first book in what was to become the Repairman Jack series longer ago than probably either I or Mr. Wilson cares to remember. Up to this one, they offered an interesting premise and a character who's unwilling position between the proverbial rock and hard place because of his own lifestyle choice was compelling.

What Mr. Wilson has chosen to do in this latest effort strikes me the same way as when I read Thomas Harris's HANNIBAL--that I was reading the work of a writer thoroughly bored with a character that had been taken beyond his control and frustrated that he was having to write yet another volume in a tale he wished was over.

Mr. Wilson may well surprise me with this new direction he's taken, and my disappointment with it won't prevent me from following to see what he does with it. However, my instinct as both a writer and an editor tells me what has been revealed about Jack isn't a good idea. Worse, it has the potential for reducing what has up till now been an interesting multifaceted character to a caricature.
3 people found this helpful
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Hate to give Jack only two stars, but even that is being kind

Oh, I just love Repairman Jack books. I really, really do. I have avidly read and enjoyed all the other books in the series. And to give this one only two stars is just painful. But this book ....Well, it took me several days to get not quite halfway through. And by that time I was picking it up so infrequently that I actually FORGOT I was reading it. I had put it down somewhere in the house, and just never picked it up again. Never even went looking for it; just eventually found it again while doing some straightening up. So since I never actually finished the darn thing, I figured I'd give it two stars instead of just one, as I suspect I might actually appreciate, if not enjoy, the ending.

The story does all it can to shake your attention loose. A seriously dull repair job that could be interesting if only Jack would just actually actively investigate! Instead we get, for example, a stakeout that largely consists of Jack explaining why he picked his stakeout point. Then in the middle of sending the reader to sleep, we actually get an interesting activity, and Jack (grudginly) intervenes. Jack does a quick fix with no actual confrontation, and the "victim" goes his own way, and Jack just shrugs his shoulders, barely curious, and goes home. This is about where I had put the book down and promptly forgot to keep reading it. And if I actually did read anything much past that event, I'm not sure I could tell you what it was. Probably more of the dull secondary story line involving Gia and how miserable she is.

I will eventually get around to finishing it. Maybe about the time the next one is scheduled to come out. Although I'll really have to rethink getting the next one in hardcover.
3 people found this helpful
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Even Babe Ruth hit some Singles

I've been a huge fan of this series ever since I discovered it three years ago, and look forward to each installment with eager anticipation. However, this entry in the Repairman Jack series falls far short of most of its predecessors in terms of suspense, humor, and fix-its. It's still a good, compulsive read, but a certain spark is missing. I kept waiting for the book to take off and reach the heights of Harbingers, but those heights never came. The only real Repairman Jack moment comes near the end, and the book features far too much of Jack reacting to situations instead of instigating solutions on his own.

Recommended for hard-core fans of Jack, but I think anyone getting started on this series needs to read a bunch of the earlier ones first.
2 people found this helpful
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Jack is running out of steam

Jack seems to be doing stuff "just because"--lacks some of the sparkle of earlier novels.
1 people found this helpful
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a little self indulgence?

I love this series. I've just recently discovered it and I can't seem to get enough. But, this one wasn't as gripping as the preceeding. I think it was the part in the very beginning where Jack walks by a book store...I won't give anything away, but that piece of author indulgence and tongue-in-cheek self adulation totally took me out of the story and put me back in the real world. If I wanted to be reminded that I was reading a novel, I'd read a book review.
1 people found this helpful
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A good addition

I thought this was a great addition to the Repairman Jack series the plot thickens
1 people found this helpful
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Popular series continues on a strong note

F. Paul Wilson's eleventh title in the Repairman Jack series features Jack's return (after his "hiatus" since Harbingers). A troubleshooter for hire based in New York City, Jack, mid-thirties, has cared for his lover Gia the last three months since her hit-and-run accident. Feeling edgy, he longs to resume his trade, and at Gia's urging, accepts a case from Christy Pickering. Christy is distraught over her eighteen-year-daughter Dawn dating an older man, Jerry Bethlehem. She hired a private investigator who grabbed her money but never reported back. Jack's investigation soon runs into a shadowy messianic cult known as the Kickers led by Hank Thompson. Genetics and a bit of science fiction come into play. Thompson and Bethlehem target Dawn for insemination, and her offspring will purify their "bloodline" empowered by oDNA, a strain derived from a cosmic force known as the Otherness. Meanwhile U.S. government scientists at the secretive Creighton Institute are also feverishly investigating oDNA, and Bethlehem is their guinea pig. Jack assembles all of the pieces in this cross-genre caper. Author Wilson's conversational prose, skillful pacing, and relentless protagonist Repairman Jack combine to propel a first-rate narrative in this successful, enduring series.
1 people found this helpful