
Published by Thomas & Mercer on February 11, 2014
John Rain thinks back to 1972 when, at the age of twenty, he was a  bagman for the CIA in Tokyo (a city Barry Eisler paints in vivid  colors). Rain's violent reaction to violent circumstances places his  life in danger and the only way to remedy his plight (and to earn the  continued backing of his CIA handler) is to carry out a difficult  assassination of a prominent Japanese politician. Hence begins Rain's  life as a professional killer.
It's interesting to contrast the  younger Rain, reckless and arrogant, with the mindful man that he  becomes later in life (as chronicled in earlier novels in the John Rain series). The younger Rain, if not quite dismissive of  morality, is still working out his own code of honor. He is just  starting to learn the value of ancient Japanese rituals. He's also  starting to learn the tradecraft that will keep him alive in a dangerous  profession. He has not yet "come to grips with that ever-present  weight" that becomes more burdensome with age (particularly if you spend  a lot of your time killing people).
True to form, Eisler makes  John Rain a likable guy, which is why readers buy John Rain books even  though his profession is less than admirable. It's a neat trick to turn a  killer into a sympathetic character. In Graveyard of Memories, Eisler  builds empathy for Rain by making him awkward and shy and improbably  sensitive in his interaction with a young woman in a wheelchair to whom  he is attracted. This is an odd love story, but it works.
As is  typical of a Rain novel, the plot is intricate without becoming  convoluted. Rain suspects he is being manipulated and possibly  double-crossed, but he isn't sure who is pulling the strings. The story  eventually focuses on his effort to answer that question. Toward the  end, Eisler deftly ties the plot into real-world corporate and CIA  scandals. But it isn't so much the plot that drew me into this novel as  the characterization of John Rain. It was a refreshing change from the  norm to read about a thriller character who realizes that he needs to  become wiser. I've enjoyed other Rain novels but this one is my new  favorite, simply because it adds new and credible dimensions to a  complex character.
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