Mark
Dawson is something of a hero of mine. As an aspiring author myself I am in awe
of the amount of work he manages to produce. What’s more it’s all of a
consistently high standard. For many years he’s been self-published and has
been very successful. Unlike many self-published writers, his books aren’t
riddled with spelling mistakes and grammatical errors. Nor are his stories
littered with plot holes. His Beatrix Rose trilogy is the first to be picked up
by a mainstream publisher, commissioned by Amazon’s Thomas & Mercer
imprint. I find it absolutely amazing that it’s taken a publisher this long to
come knocking at his door, his work is that good.
So In
Cold Blood, the first in the Beatrix Rose trilogy. Is it any good? Well yes
actually, unsurprisingly it is. Beatrix is a super-assassin; think a female
equivalent of Jason Bourne, albeit less the amnesia, angst and moral
compunction. By that I don’t mean she’s psychopathic in some way, more that she
has a laser like focus on her objectives, which in this trilogy is revenge. We
were first introduced to Beatrix in Dawson’s earlier works, which centred on an
assassin named John Milton. Beatrix was employed by Group 15, the same unit as
Milton, and was a contemporary. The back-story to her own trilogy is that she
was betrayed by Control, the head of Group 15, her husband murdered, her
daughter taken away from her. In Cold Blood picks up the plot a good few years
later, Beatrix is reunited with her daughter and they are in hiding in Marrakech
where she plots her revenge on Control and the agents he sent after her family.
In Cold
Blood sees our heroine receive help from the new head of Group 15 as she plots
her revenge. She discovers that one of the agents sent to kill her is a hostage
of pirates in Somalia and off she goes. I don’t want to say anymore about the
plot at risk of divulging spoilers, but needles to say there follows a lot of
high-octane mayhem and violence.
I award this book 5 stars
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