Full disclosure: I was offered a free copy of this ebook by the publisher in exchange for a review. You can buy Florida Firefight on Amazon by following this link.
I'd
never read any of the HAWKER novels back in the day, so the new ebook
version was my first exposure to the series, which starts from a premise
well-known to anyone who likes vigilante fiction from the '60s through
the '80s. Courts are soft on crime, lawyers are all scumbags, and cops
are either incompetent administrators gunning for a run on a political
ticket in the future, or tough, hard-bitten streetwise crusaders trying
to keep the criminal element in check, while constantly being undermined
by "the system". Meanwhile, gangs of violent psychopaths and drug
dealers roam the city streets like some kind of Tolkien-esque invasion
of orcs and goblins.
Enter Hawker, a cop who doesn't play by the
rules, blah blah blah. He kills a bad guy against orders and winds up
resigning from the force, only to be hired by a reclusive millionaire to
become a one-man vigilante army. You know the deal - the Punisher, but
with better financing. To start the series off, Hawker goes to Mahogany
Bay, a south Florida town where some Colombian drug-running bad guys are
pushing around the townsfolk while using their land for smuggling
purposes.
Hawker goes down there and purports to be the new owner
of the Tarpon Inn, a formerly successful tourist spot which has
definitely seen better days. He immediately gets into a fight with some
of the Colombians and gets his butt kicked, but then beats up their
leader and pulls a gun on them. He soon hooks up with a Native American
woman named Winnie Tiger who is a biologist working in Mahogany Bay, and
the only one who helps Hawker when he first encounters the Colombians.
There is sexual tension from the get-go, and eventually they have sex.
Of course.
I don't really need to give the shot-by-shot plot
structure of the book - that's easy enough to find and it's a short book
anyway, with a quick enough tempo that ensures an engaged reader will
zip through it in a couple of evenings or a lazy Sunday. There's a good
amount of gun porn and the violence is suitably visceral, with people
getting shot, stabbed, punched, blown up, set on fire...even violated
with an air tank and inflated to death (more on that later). While the
body count isn't extreme, it is substantial enough to satisfy those
whose primary reason for reading such fare is the satisfaction of punks
and thugs getting their comeuppance.
And, to be fair, the plot
did take me a bit by surprise. Hawker doesn't just go to Mahogany Bay
and start slaughtering Colombians. Instead, he actually spends a couple
of months in the town, working with the locals to bolster both their
pride, and the town's economy. One of the more satisfying scenes in the
book involves the townsfolk attacking the Colombians' stronghold and
giving them a thorough whupping - sans killing, for the most part.
Hawker had cautioned the locals against turning into killers, and there
is an impressive amount of restraint and moral obligation there. Of
course, even in the few moments where Hawker himself tries non-lethal
means to deal with his foes, circumstances conveniently force him to
proceed otherwise, and he does the lion's share of the killing in the
book, aided by the Tarpon Inn's cook and bartender, both of whom are
more than they appear.
I also really enjoyed Hawker using a (in
1984 terms) advanced computer system to track down information about the
various players in the situation and gain an information advantage over
them. Most of the protagonists in these books, if they do computerized
information gathering at all, outsource that to some nerdish ally who is
a "computer genius". While Hawker was trained by such a genius on how
to do this, he does do it all himself, employing some convenient hacking
software and an old-school phone modem to search various databases,
even planting a false identity at one point to establish his cover. I
hope this is something that continues throughout the series.
Unfortunately
for readers in 2016, there are a lot of cringe-worthy parts in the
book. Without exception, all of the "good guys" are white, while all of
the "bad guys" are minorities. Even the alluring ("mystical" of course)
Winnie Tiger is secretly in cahoots with the bad guys. There's one white
German bodyguard of a bad guy, but Hawker hints that he thinks the guy
is gay, calling him "...a candidate for AIDS disease.", a line that was
so stunning, it took me a moment to even grasp its full, historical,
implications. There's also a "hulking mulatto" named Simio
(...really...?), given all the usual apelike descriptive portraiture,
who likes to inflict pain as a strongman for the Big Bad Guy of the
novel. Hawker kills him in a horrible fashion when Simio's pants split
at the backseam during a fight, exposing his buttocks, and Hawker rams
the nozzle of an air tank in Simio's backdoor and turns the valve,
inflicting horrific trauma upon Simio's insides. I'm sure a Freudian
could write a paper on that scene alone.
Setting aside racial and
homophobic issues for gendered ones, there are four female characters
in the book. Winnie Tiger, the mystical Indian woman who has sex with
and then tries to kill Hawker, two large-breasted blondes who both die
only after their shirts are ripped open to expose their assets in death,
and Hawker's ex-wife, with whom he has dinner with before going to
Florida, and who he almost, but I think does not, has sex with. She
factors into about three or four pages of the book and is then
completely irrelevant, making me wonder why she's even included except
as a possible means to make Hawker seem more three-dimensional. Police
Sergeant Dee Dee McCall (HUNTER television series, debuting the same
year - 1984 - as this book) would not be impressed with the gender
politics of Florida Firefight.
If you can get past these usual,
rather uncomfortable artifacts (and if you made it past the first
chapter, I'm sure you can), this is still a satisfying read for fans of
such "serial vigilante" books. The ebook edition is well-formatted and
there aren't any OCR typos that I noticed, typical for Open Road Media's
products, which are usually very well done.
7 comments:
You know I rather doubt a Native American would be named Tiger. Tigers have to do with the other Indians, the ones that live on a sub-continent in Asia.
Edgar Rice Burroughs famously had Tarzan kill a tigers until someone wrote to him and explain that tigers don't live in Africa.
Also, it turns out she's not really (?) an American Indian at all...or who knows. The twist with her at the end is just moronic.
So the bad guys in the novel didn't bother to do any research? Or was that the writer?
I'm thinking the odds are 50/50.
I started one of his books once and couldn't really get past the first few pages. I'm sure for some folks he's just right, but that book at least didn't work for me.
While talking about this type of character. Comic Book Resources polled the "best" Punisher stories
http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2016/03/22/40-greatest-punisher-stories-master-list/
That's interesting that those are back in print after all this time, it seemed like Randy Wayne White had "disowned" them for a while. He reprinted his early Dusty Morgan paperbacks, but never mentioned the Hawker books on his website. Maybe it was some kind of rights tie-up. They're products of their time, of course, but nothing to be (overly) ashamed of. DETROIT COMBAT is the best one, where Hawker takes on an obese porno queen who makes snuff films.
Some of his Doc Ford books are pretty over the top, also. In one, the lead character ends up living in the jungle in Brazil with a female teenage cannibal while waiting for a chance to catch the two bad guys and kill them -- something he only does with his bare hands, as a matter of principal.
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