The Cuban Affair, DeMille’s latest, drops Daniel
"Mac" MacCormick, ex-Ranger now sea captain, directly into the
Obama-era “Cuban Thaw” where he is hired to help Cuban dissidents in recovering
pre-Castro property deeds, and maybe a whole ton of cash, all while trying to
escape from Havana. Mac is a fun, archetypal DeMille alpha male. He prefers
beer to wine, one-liners to pillow-talk, and has the libido of a
seventeen-year-old. Mac is a good guy, and someone you would want on your side
in a fight. Or a good game of cornhole. Yet, he is hardly original. In fact, the
name “Daniel MacCormick” could easily be replaced with DeMille regulars “John
Corey” or “John Sutter” and aside from environment settings, no one would be
the wiser. DeMille, of course, knows his audience and easily provides that which has made him popular. The Cuban Affair is a fun, thankfully-fast read that allows DeMille to postulate Cuba’s place in the current global community while making sure good ole Communism is still the go-to baddie as the CIA remains the slightly lesser of two evils. As original as the Caribbean setting is, the infiltrate-and-escape plot is certainly not. DeMille peppers the chase with fun characters and clever dialogue, but even that only has the appeal of a Corona Light, when the long-time fan is thirsty for a cuba libre. Right?
Many thanks to Simon & Schuster and NetGalley for the ARC, as well as to Nelson DeMille, who remains one of my favorite authors and whom I would share a Corona with anytime.
As Always,
theJOE
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