Friendly Fire by John Gilstrap
Sunday, March 19, 2017 at 9:32AM 
Published by Pinnacle Books on June 28, 2016
Scorpion begins Friendly Fire by rescuing a congressman’s daughter who  has been kidnapped (the details of how he finds her are conveniently unreported). Ethan Falk begins Friendly Fire by murdering the man who  abused him as a child. He was rescued from that man eleven years earlier  (by Scorpion, of course), but since there is no record of the  kidnapping or the rescue, the police don’t believe him. That puts  Scorpion, who keeps his daring and extra-legal rescues confidential, in a  sticky situation.
Scorpion is Jonathan Grave, who sometimes  accepts assignments from Irene Rivers, a/k/a Wolverine, who also happens  to be director of the FBI. Calling in a favor, Grave wants Rivers to  explain why the man Falk killed, James Stepahin, appears never to have  existed. That leads to an improbable storyline about terrorists and  their hired guns who plan to cause havoc in Virginia.
I don’t  hold its improbability against Friendly Fire because improbability is  the new norm in the world of thrillers and the novel is not so  outlandish as to be laughable. The fuzziness of the background (neither  the team of killers/kidnappers who cause havoc throughout the novel nor  the people who hire them are well developed) is offset by the action  scenes, which are tense if fairly standard for an action thriller.  Scorpion and his sidekick Big Guy manage to kill dozens of bad guys  without breaking a sweat, about what you’d expect from the action genre.  Fortunately, the quality of John Gilstrap’s prose is better than  average for the genre, making Friendly Fire a fast and pleasant read.
The  strength of the novel lies in a subplot involving Falk who, while  confined to jail, grudgingly agrees to open himself up to the therapist  who wants to explore his story about being kidnapped and abused before  being rescued by Scorpion (a story that people in authority regard as a  fantasy, except for a lone cop who does the legwork to dig up  corroborating evidence). The facts underlying the kidnapping and the  mystery surrounding the kidnapper again veer toward the improbable, but  the scenes involving Falk and the therapist are quite compelling. They  are, I think, the glue that holds the novel together and that  distinguish Friendly Fire from the glut of action thrillers that scream  for a reader’s attention.
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