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Black flag / David Ricciardi.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Ricciardi, David. Jake Keller thriller ; 3.Publisher: New York : Berkley, 2020Edition: First editionDescription: 367 pages ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9781984804662
  • 1984804669
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Summary: "CIA officer Jake Keller faces stakes that are very high and very personal in the latest electrifying thriller from the author of Rogue Strike. After years of relative calm, piracy has returned to the high sea. But the days of AK-47s and outboard engines are over. The new pirates hit like a SEAL team. Highly trained and using cutting-edge technology, they make sure their victims are never heard from again. Ships and crews are vanishing at a staggering rate. As the threat to international shipping grows, United States authorities become determined to find the source of this new danger. Jake Keller has a plan-to lure the pirate mastermind out of hiding by infiltrating his organization-but it is a dangerous gambit, made more so by Jake's personal involvement with the beautiful heiress to a Greek shipping fortune and an ulterior agenda coming out of CIA headquarters. As the threats close in from all sides, Jake finds himself faced with a familiar choice: back off, or go on the offensive. His fate and the fate of a nation hang on his decision"-- Provided by publisher.
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Item type Current library Collection Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Phillipsburg Free Public Library Adult Fiction Adult Fiction FIC RICCIARDI Available 36748002479568
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Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

After years of relative calm, the threat from Somali pirates has increased exponentially. When a couple of American ships get taken, U.S. authorities become determined to find the source of this new danger.

Jake Keller has a plan. It is unconventional, but that is par for the course with Jake. He hopes to lure the mastermind behind these crimes out of hiding by posing as a rival. It is a dangerous plan, made more so by Jake's personal involvement with the beautiful heiress to a Greek shipping fortune. If he is not careful, Jake is as likely to end up as a corpse as he is to uncover his nemesis.

"CIA officer Jake Keller faces stakes that are very high and very personal in the latest electrifying thriller from the author of Rogue Strike. After years of relative calm, piracy has returned to the high sea. But the days of AK-47s and outboard engines are over. The new pirates hit like a SEAL team. Highly trained and using cutting-edge technology, they make sure their victims are never heard from again. Ships and crews are vanishing at a staggering rate. As the threat to international shipping grows, United States authorities become determined to find the source of this new danger. Jake Keller has a plan-to lure the pirate mastermind out of hiding by infiltrating his organization-but it is a dangerous gambit, made more so by Jake's personal involvement with the beautiful heiress to a Greek shipping fortune and an ulterior agenda coming out of CIA headquarters. As the threats close in from all sides, Jake finds himself faced with a familiar choice: back off, or go on the offensive. His fate and the fate of a nation hang on his decision"-- Provided by publisher.

Excerpt provided by Syndetics

One SIX MONTHS LATER . . . Jake keller felt the blade of the machete against his throat. The Somalis had gotten the jump on them. "We're with the United Nations," Jake said in English. "We're here to help." "You want to help? You give us money," said Dameer. The nickname meant "donkey," and he bared his teeth as he burst out laughing. His henchmen laughed too, as if he'd said the funniest thing they'd ever heard. Dameer slammed his fist down on the table and the laughter stopped. His eyes were bulging and bloodshot. "Pay us!" He folded his arms across his chest while two of his cohorts brandished AK-47s. They were even more doped up than their leader. "We just want to talk," Jake said calmly. He'd been in worse spots before. The Middle East, Europe, North Africa. Trouble had followed Jake like a hungry dog for the last two years-ever since he'd gone into the field for CIA. "No money, no talk," said Dameer. Jake could smell the rancid breath of the man holding the knife to his throat. "Maybe we take you hostage," Dameer said. "Then UN pay us!" He put his hands on the table. He was missing two fingers on his left hand. They looked as if they'd been cauterized with a rusty piece of iron. Punishment for something, no doubt. "We'll pay for protection," said Pickens. "We just need to know who we're paying." Dameer glared at him. Though Pickens was black, he looked nothing like the wiry Somalis. He'd been an outside linebacker at Northwestern University before joining the Agency. Beads of sweat glistened on his thick biceps and shaved head. He was built like an oak tree. "Money, now!" Dameer shouted, slamming his fist against the table. Pickens retrieved four fifty-dollar bills from his pocket and placed them on the table. Each one was a month's wages for an honest Somali. But there wasn't an honest Somali in sight. Dameer scooped up the cash and stuffed it in his pocket. "More money, gaal." It meant "infidel" in Somali, but the locals used it for any foreigner. "There will be a lot of money," Jake said, "once we talk to your boss." "You pay me," said Dameer. "Then you go to Kitadra." It was the pirate capital of the world. With no prospects on land, young Somali men with nothing to lose had taken to the sea to kidnap their way to riches, but aggressive countermeasures by ships' crews and the world's navies ensured that by 2015, the era of the Somali pirates was dead. But it had made a comeback. A new type of piracy had emerged in the last six months, and it was far more profitable and far more lethal than the old one. With each attack, twenty men disappeared and twenty million dollars' worth of stolen cargo vanished-neither the crew nor the ships were ever seen again. And it was a lot of money-enough to exert enormous influence over the broken nation of Somalia. It backed private armies and bribed corrupt politicians. It supported terrorism and funded human trafficking. For the country's citizens, it meant a lifetime of living in fear: extortion, rape, murder. The new wave of piracy was about to put the struggling country down for good. And Jake and Pickens had been ordered to stop it. "Who do you work for?" Jake asked. Dameer said something in Arabic to his accomplices. Jake didn't know the Somali dialect well, but he understood enough of what Dameer had said to know what was coming next. And it wasn't good. Pickens spoke Arabic and Somali, but he stuck to English around the locals. He learned a lot more when they thought he didn't understand. Like now. It was going to be four-on-two. Dameer and the man with the machete, plus the two men with the Kalashnikovs, but they were so doped up that they probably couldn't hit the air in front of them. The biggest risk from those idiots was a ricochet. But it was a real risk. The small room was made of concrete with a corrugated steel roof. Each bullet would have a couple of chances to find a target and if the gunmen went full Somali-style-rifle held at the waist and trigger held down until the gun was empty-there was a better-than-even chance that no one on either side would walk out alive. The two Americans made eye contact. Pickens nodded almost imperceptibly. Jake snapped his head back, shattering the nose of the man with the machete, then grabbed the hand with the knife and pushed the blade away. The man staggered backward with tears in his eyes and blood streaming down his face. Jake turned and punched him in the throat, then kneed him in the groin. The Somali crumpled to the ground, out of the fight. Dameer stepped out from behind the table and squared off against Pickens. The Somali was tall and lanky, with a sweat-stained shirt, crazy eyes, and a knife of his own. It was rusty and dull, except for the edge, which was shiny and sharp. Pickens brought his forearms up to protect his face and chest, like a boxer. Old school. The Somali waved the knife back and forth like he was trying to sell it. He took half a step forward. Pickens faked right, then rotated his two-hundred-forty-pound body and launched a left into Dameer's face. The blow lifted the man off his feet and hurled him into the back wall. His sandals were still on the floor where he'd been standing. It was a hell of a punch. But the goons with the AK-47s had finally discovered that something was amiss. They were shouting and yelling and gesturing wildly-and pointing their rifles at Pickens. two The two men with the Kalashnikovs were shaking. It might have been from the drugs, or maybe they were nervous, but Jake wasn't looking to make a diagnosis. He was trying to keep his partner alive. "Drop the weapons!" he shouted. He had a 9mm pistol up and was shifting his aim between the two gunmen, making sure they each had a chance to look straight into the muzzle before he switched targets. They could shoot Pickens, but it would cost them their lives. It should have been an easy decision, even in a drug-induced haze, but the gunmen didn't react. Jake yelled again, this time in Arabic, and the men literally dropped their rifles onto the concrete floor. Pickens scooped up the weapons and the two Americans backed through the door to a beige Daihatsu hatchback-a car so generic that it was like a third-world cloak of invisibility. With Pickens behind the wheel, they quickly disappeared into the low-rise streets of Mogadishu. Voted "the most dangerous city in the world" for twenty years running, it was a place where machine gun fire punctuated conversations and truck bombs ended them. Though the thugs who'd tried to ambush them probably couldn't walk a straight line, much less tail them through city streets, the two CIA officers didn't take any chances. Pickens drove a full surveillance detection route over the narrow roads. The routes were designed not only to spot a tail but to do so without making it obvious, because acting like a trained intelligence operative was the surest way to confirm that someone was a trained intelligence operative. Pickens spotted an accident blocking the road ahead and turned down a narrow side street to avoid a potential ambush. Lined on both sides with crumbling stucco buildings, it was impossible to tell where the blown sand ended and the cracked pavement began. He steered carefully around a man sleeping in the shade of a parked car and back onto a larger road where the two men could relax-somewhat. "I've never seen a man knocked out of his shoes before," Jake said. Pickens grinned. "The key," he said, "is to rotate your hips and follow through on the swing." Jake checked the side-view mirror. "Too bad those idiots didn't know anything." It was the third meeting they'd had in the four days since Jake had arrived, and each one had nearly cost him his life. "We've got to start somewhere," said Pickens. John Pickens had been with the Agency for twenty years and working the Mogadishu account for the last eight. It was a medium-sized CIA station, but most of his fellow officers in the Directorate of Operations were working with their counterparts in the Somali National Intelligence and Security Agency or deployed in Counterterrorism Center teams. The CTC pursuit teams were the sexier side of CIA and, for the past twenty years, counterterrorism had been the fast track to advancement. Pickens was in a career backwater. "Everyone knows you're understaffed here, John, but this is a new threat and we need a new response. Seven tankers have disappeared without a single distress call or ransom demand." Pickens snaked around the site of a recent IED attack. Two days prior, al-Shabaab terrorists had daisy-chained together half a dozen 122mm Russian artillery shells and detonated them in the back of a delivery truck. One hundred forty-six people had died. The air still smelled of diesel fuel and gunpowder, burnt plastic and seared flesh. An African Union soldier was in the blast pit, searching the twisted chassis for a vehicle identification number while children played nearby on piles of concrete rubble that had been their homes just forty-eight hours earlier. "I told Ted this should be a joint op with FBI," Jake said, "and he told me to shut up and find out who's in charge of the pirates." "Is that what Black Flag is about?" Pickens looked over. "Is Graves looking to put people in the ground?" Ted Graves was chief of the Agency's Special Activities Center. The paramilitary officers under his command operated in the field with little oversight and were known for using their considerable autonomy wisely and ethically. The same could not be said for their boss. "Phase one is to identify who's behind it," Jake said. "I'm guessing phase two is rolling him up, but Ted hasn't shared his long-term strategy with me." Pickens laughed and fist-bumped his new partner. "With you or with anyone, brother. I'm just trying to figure out why the Seventh Floor brass suddenly care. Piracy has been a way of life down here for twenty years." "It's about oil." Pickens shrugged. "Always is." "But not the way it used to be," Jake said. "Now that the U.S. isn't importing as much from the Middle East, we're reducing the military presence we've had there for the past fifty years." "The 'Pivot to Asia'?" "Exactly. Our forces are moving east to deal with national and regional threats, but whoever is stealing these oil tankers is clearing close to twenty million dollars each time they sell the cargo on the black market. That kind of money can fund terror networks and weapons of mass destruction." Pickens turned down a side street. "Then why aren't the pirates ransoming the crews? That's where they used to make their money." "Anonymity," Jake said. "Headquarters doesn't have a clue who is behind this: not an email, not a text message, nothing. You start making ransom demands and you leave a trail. Whoever is behind the hijackings understands operational security. This isn't six-skinnies-in-a-skiff anymore. We're up against professionals with training and resources, probably ex-military." Pickens scowled. "I don't know, Jake. We take out this pirate and somebody will take his place before the body is cold. There's no rule of law down here. People have gotten used to taking what they can today because they might not be alive tomorrow." "Economic opportunity is the long-term solution, but that's never going to happen unless we find the pirate leader and put him out of business." The two men were stopped behind a line of cars and Pickens was tapping his hand against the steering wheel. Jake couldn't tell if the anxiety was from the traffic, the narrow escape, or something else. "I'm on board with the mission," said Pickens eventually, "because that's my job, but Somalia is a lost cause." three Jake and Pickens drove past Villa Somalia. Built by Italian colonialists, the whitewashed Art Deco building was the official residence of the Somali president, but with the country embroiled in a civil war since 1991, the villa changed tenants like a hot-sheet motel. The current government had been in place for less than a year, and though it didn't control much territory outside Mogadishu, the new president took his personal security very seriously. He'd paid a lot of bribes and made a great many promises to secure his election, and he wasn't going to waste the opportunity to grow rich off it. Armored personnel carriers staked out the compound's corners and drop-down Delta barriers blocked the entrance. Just a week earlier, the surrounding neighborhood had been evacuated and sealed when security forces were alerted to a smoking vehicle on a nearby street. A military demolition team had examined the stolen delivery truck and found it packed with thousands of pounds of homemade explosives-and a faulty detonator. Traffic in the neighborhood had been frozen for the better part of a day while the bomb was defused. Four blocks east of Villa Somalia was the safe house Pickens had been using for the past twenty-six months. It was close enough to the villa to benefit from the additional security but far enough away that it wouldn't become bug-splat the next time someone tried to kill the president. Like many private homes in the area, the quarter-acre property was surrounded by a high concrete wall. The small house had a pale yellow exterior and a red roof. Aside from a few pockmarks from a decade-old mortar attack, it would have looked at home anywhere in the tropics. Pickens opened the sliding steel gate with a remote control. He kept a variety of cars, trucks, and motorbikes on the property. They were rotated often, swept regularly for tracking devices, and rented through shell corporations set up by the Agency-with the collision-damage waivers fully paid up. Jake and Pickens walked across the small courtyard under a cloudless blue sky that had dropped less than an inch of rain on the country in the last two years. The two men entered the house and spent an hour reviewing what had gone right, and what had gone wrong, during their meeting with Dameer. They'd had several similar encounters and were still no closer to identifying who was behind the resurgence of piracy. Jake had just suggested a change in strategy when the buzzer rang for the front gate. A live video feed popped up on Pickens's cell phone of a lone man standing on the street. Lean, relaxed, with a medium-brown complexion and an untucked shirt, he looked like half the men in Somalia. Excerpted from Black Flag by David Ricciardi All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

Ricciardi's exciting third Jake Keller thriller (after 2019's Rogue Strike) finds the CIA officer and his agency partner, John Pickens, in Mogadishu, Somalia, seeking to identify the mastermind behind the bandits who have been using high-speed skiffs to attack oil tankers. After killing the crews, the bandits seize the oil and sell it on the black market. The two most promising suspects are Badeed, chief elder of the Hawiye clan, and Yaxaas, the warlord of the Darwood clan. Yaxaas keeps a pet alligator named Little Yaxaas, and it's no surprise what Little Yaxaas's job is in the organization. Keller has a plan to lure the mastermind out of hiding, but the mission is complicated by a secret agenda originating from CIA headquarters. The appealing leads have complimentary strengths. Pickens is old school, interested in human intelligence, while Keller comes from an analysis background and is adept with technology. The complicated plot and furious action build to a final, head-snapping twist. Riccardi has hit his stride with this outing. Agent: Rick Richter, Aevitas Creative Management. (May)

Booklist Review

Piracy ain't what it used to be. Gone are the days of motorboats and automatic weapons. Today's pirates are skilled operatives, as well trained and well armed as any special-ops team. When CIA officer Jake Keller is tasked with penetrating a Somalian piracy operation, it will take all of his skills, plus a rather large quantity of good luck, to complete his mission. This is the third Keller thriller (after Warning Light, 2018, and Rogue Strike, 2019). The writing is a little rough in places--one last polish might have been in order--but there's no denying the story is timely and genuinely dramatic. Jake, too, is a good series lead, a tough guy who's used to working alone and who's possessed of a sharp mind that keeps him one step ahead of mortal danger. Fans of the first two Keller novels will certainly want to read this one, and action-adventure readers who haven't yet met Jake should seize this opportunity.
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