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For readers who believe truth is stranger than fiction, Bob
King's tell-all book about the U.S. government's covert operations is an
eye-opener. "In a world inundated with deception, media disinformation,
cover stories, and lies, it's impossible to know exactly what the truth really
means," writes King. "All I know for sure is that a very dark side of
our government is in control." King tells how his ragtag team of
blue-collar commandos, known as "Spooky 8," was frequently assembled
to perform sensitive operations for the U.S. government in Central and South
America. King takes a novelistic approach to his story (which purports to be
rooted in fact), creating tough characters and macho dialogue. He shares Tom
Clancy's love of technical detail and describes the unusual tools used by
black-op professionals, such as high-powered amphetamines that "allowed us
to work at 150 percent for three or four days without sleep." (The side
effects: "At the end of the mission, your body shut down so hard, you
might sleep for a couple of days.") The plot revolves around a government
conspiracy to eliminate Spooky 8's members on what is supposed to be a simple
mission of setting up surveillance equipment in the Colombian jungle.
Apparently King and his buddies know too many secrets, and somebody high up
wants them eliminated. Fans of Richard Marcinko's Rogue
Warrior won't want to miss Spooky 8. --John J. Miller
From Publishers Weekly
From the very beginning, King
assumes a defensive position: "I expect a considerable effort will be made
to discredit my past, challenge my veracity, or even attack my mental state to
make sure few will take this story and what it represents seriously." What
this book represents will surely disturb many readersAbut not for the reasons
King thinks it will. Though he wants us to be shocked by the fact that the U.S.
government is willing to betray its covert operatives, what will trouble them
is King's own attitude toward events. The book bears obvious similarities to
Richard Marcinko's Rogue Warrior series, but readers know that Marcinko's
teamAin both his fiction and nonfictionAis under the command of the U.S. Navy
and that its existence is therefore a matter of record. By contrast, King
writes that his team, Spooky 8, which he joined in 1975, was a covert team
designed to work the "dark, classified side of black operations" and
that he never knew who was running the show. In an epithet-filled style thick
with self-conscious bravado, King describes a Spooky 8 mission gone wrong. In
1992, the team was dispatched to Colombia to set up surveillance equipment to
monitor the drug trade. It was ambushed and lost three members. The "final
mission" of the subtitle refers to how King and his fellow survivors
deduced who betrayed them, kidnapped the culprit and killed him, with King pulling
the trigger ("BBLLLAAAMMM! 'That's for Santana'"). One team member
collected the spent shell casings to make a necklace. The prospect that King is
telling the truth may distress readers more than the prospect that he is
fabricating events. Those events are related with a modicum of suspense in
adrenalized prose laced with sometimes laughable dialogue. But even if
everything that King says happened actually did occur, his telling is so devoid
of meaningful moral reflection that it will satisfy only those willing to entertain
the most lurid and violent revenge fantasies. Photos not seen by PW. Film
rights to Hughes Brothers' Underworld Productions. (July)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.