
Published by Thomas & Mercer on October 25, 2016
Livia Lone follows a current trend in “vigilante justice” novels. A woman who  suffered horrific abuse as a child becomes a hardened killer as an adult  who avenges crime victims by killing their victimizers. My favorite of  those is Taylor Stevens’ Vanessa Michael Munroe. Livia Lone struck me as  an attempt to blend Munroe with Barry Eisler's professional killer, John Rain. Unfortunately, Lone isn’t as  interesting as either Munroe or Rain. In fact, Livia Lone (speaking of  either the character or the book) is predictable, too often boring, and  way over-the-top.
Livia Lone is a cop,  but in her off-duty time she murders rapists. That hobby lets her kill  time while she waits for her true prey to be released from prison.  Timothy Tyler was once her captor, and she wants him to tell her what  happened to her sister after they were both trafficked as children from  Thailand. Livia’s backstory is told in chapters that alternate with the  present day.
The chapters set in the past explain how Livia came  to be the person she is. Barry Eisler describes (in scenes that  deliberately avoid being too graphic) sexual abuse by her captors and  then by the influential American who adopts her. Contrasted with the  evil adults who abused Livia are good adults who are kind to Livia.  Livia’s backstory comes across as manipulative rather than honest, and  characters from her past seem to exist only to make the reader cheer or  boo.
In the present, Livia is a police detective specializing in  sex crimes, particularly those involving children. Livia is on a  crusade. That’s a bad quality in a real cop because crusades impair  objectivity, but it’s also a bad quality in a fictional cop because  crusaders do not tend to have multi-faceted personalities. That’s the  novel’s biggest problem.
Nothing about Livia is surprising. Her  life follows a blueprint. She is the icon of an abused child who  overcomes her past by empowering herself. The only thing unique or  interesting about Livia is that she conflates killing bad people with  sexual bliss.
Other characters suffer from the same  one-dimensionality. Livia’s classmate, his father, and a cop who  eventually becomes involved in her life are such exemplars of good they  should be wearing halos. Villainous characters are exemplars of pure  evil. That’s common in thrillers (many readers seem to like a clear  dichotomy between good and evil) but the failure to reflect the real  world keeps me from recommending the novel to readers who are looking  for something that might make them think.
With the exception of a  few good people, every male Livia knows is a rapist or a child molester.  Other than Livia, nearly every female is a victim, and they all agree  that murdering victimizers is the best kind of justice. It’s enough to  make me give up on the human race.
To give the story some action,  Eisler has Lone confronting an attacker from time to time, but the  scenes are so contrived that they do nothing to change the story’s  predictable nature. Some of the abuse visited upon victims (but not  Livia, because readers wouldn’t like that) is taken so far over-the-top  that I just couldn’t believe any of it.
As I mentioned, the only  interesting aspect of Livia is her kinky sexuality, even though I didn’t  believe a moment of it. Oddly, Livia needs to get rough with a guy  before she can enjoy sex with him. Of course, if a guy needs to get  rough with her in order to enjoy sex, she kills him (which in itself is a  kind of a sexual experience for her). The double standard would be an  interesting character trait if it were acknowledged and explored, but  like anything else that might give complexity to the story, it’s just  ignored. Still, Livia’s kink is the only interesting aspect of her  personality. People who feel justified about being a serial killer  should be interesting, but Livia isn’t.
I’m disappointed that  Livia Lone isn’t a better, deeper book. It is written in prose that  flows smoothly and, while it could have been much tighter, the story  moves at a reasonable pace. Many of Eisler’s fans will like this new  series despite (or perhaps because of) its lack of nuance. I have no  problem with that, but I don’t plan to read another one in this series  and I can’t recommend this one. It gets a big ho-hum from me.
NOT RECOMMENDED