Review by Booklist Review
Bodyguard Atticus Kodiak isn't the kind of knuckle-dragger who accompanies a Mafia don, but a Brooks Brothers^-attired pro trained by the government's Executive Protective Service. When Atticus accompanies his significant other to an abortion clinic that has been targeted by a militant right-to-life group, he inadvertently finds his next assignment: protecting the clinic's director, Dr. Felice Romero, from an escalating terror campaign. Rucka's novel is hardly great literature, but it is an engrossing read from two disparate perspectives. First, the book is filled with a proceduralist's insights into the difficulties faced by bodyguards in protecting anyone from deranged assailants, and, second, the author's scenes of orchestrated violence employed by the antiabortion group and his characterizations of people twisted enough to murder to protect life are chilling and have real narrative energy. Thomas Gaughan
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
The world of the professional bodyguard provides the arena for this no-nonsense first novel. Atticus Kodiak, 28, is hired to protect Felice Romero, director of a Manhattan abortion clinic targeted by militant pro-lifers. The pros and cons of abortion are intelligently presented as Kodiak tries to protect his client and her daughter, who's afflicted with Down's syndrome. Soon the bodyguard, whose girlfriend has just undergone an abortion, finds himself personally committed to his client. Bomb threats, shootings and several murders, one particularly tragic, heat up the action, driving the narrative toward an explosive climax at a cemetery. Rucka's prose is clean and visual, his characterizations and dialogue are economical and his storytelling scoots along at a fast clip. A few top crime writers-Robert B. Parker in the Spenser series, for instance-have wandered into bodyguard territory. Rucka has the talent to make it his own, however, especially if he spins this trim tale into a series. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
First novelist Rucka delivers a story as timely as today's headlines. Atticus Kodiak, a bodyguard by profession, gets caught in the middle of a demonstration on the day he brings his girlfriend to the Woman's LifeCare Clinic for an abortion. The clinic, run by Dr. Felice Romero, has been targeted by the Sword of the Silent, a group of pro-life fanatics run by the megalomaniacal Jonathan Crowell. Because of escalating tensions between the pro-choice and pro-life factions, cooler heads schedule a peace summit of sorts, christened Common Ground. Romero plans to attend, but when she receives some very nasty and specific threats by mail, she hires Kodiak and associates to keep her and her daughter safe. This is a tense and exciting novel filled with some odd characters. Recommended for popular collections.Dawn L. Anderson, North Richland Hills P. L., Tex. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
First novel about a professional bodyguard hired to protect the director of a women's health clinic in New York City. Atticus Kodiak meets Dr. Felice Romero when he brings his girlfriend, Alison, to her clinic for an abortion. In just a few days, Romero is scheduled to kick off a massive conference on abortion; her idea is that pro-life and pro-choice forces can all air their views and vent their passions and, perhaps, come to some common understandings. But Romero's life is being threatened and she's frightened, if not for herself then for her daughter Katie, a sweet, innocent girl with Down's syndrome. The probable source of the threats is Jonathan Crowell, a charlatan and demagogue with a known history of urging violence against those involved in abortion. Feeling odd and even rather guilty after Alison's abortion, Atticus agrees to bring in his team to guard Romero round-the-clock, but hardly has the job begun when Katie is brutally murdered. Her death is certainly affecting, but newcomer Rucka can't quite control the results: Romero staggers through the narrative like a zombie, and Atticus never really overcomes the reader's sense that he's incompetent. Matters aren't helped much by Rucka's portrayals of two unpleasant women: Alison, who calls Atticus in the middle of his trials to announce she wants to break up; and a brash private investigator, Bridgett, whose presence seems, at best, contrived. Then, too, Crowell's villainy is something of a red herring, the real tale having more to do with the search for Katie's insane killer than with the battle over abortion. What Rucka does manage to suggest is a sense of ordinary people somehow battling through a time of panic and terrible stress. There's too much feeling here for a purely commercial effort, and too many concessions to suspense for a thoughtful statement about abortion. Powerful, but uneven.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.