Johnstone had a formula he employed over and over in his horror and action thrillers, namely a protagonist veteran (Korea, Vietnam, etc.) trained in special forces, usually with a medal of honor, suddenly placed in some situation where he has to kick some serious ass-- the devil, someone evil or amoral, etc. Here, our lead, Barry Rivers, served in Vietnam, a decorated veteran, who now works in a partnership in D.C. which deals in international arms deals. One day he decides to give his old man a call and his dad sounds a little off. Well, maybe time for a visit anyhow, and he has some vacation time due, so off to New Orleans! Before he goes, however, he learns from a contact that his father may be being harassed by the Dixie mob, so he gets himself a federal license to pack some serious heat.
Turns out, something is going down with his dad for sure. His father owns and runs a trucking company and someone is putting the squeeze on it for sure. He finally gets his dad to open up about it, but the culprits are pretty elusive. After a pow wow with the local mob boss, who tells him his father is being set up, but not by him, things start going a little crazy. Who are the bad guys? Well, the company gets a surprise contract to haul secret government loads, but Barry has his suspicions. Something is off. Once they start to haul these loads, things go from bad to worse...
One thing about Johnstone, his villains are always really, really bad guys. If not the devil (a trope of his horror), they are some amoral, child rapists or some such. There is no grey area! I will not go into detail here to avoid spoilers, but yeah, some truly fucked up bastards for sure. So, Barry, with the help of some fellow truckers (all of whom seem to have a military background 😎 and know their way around serious fire power), he decides to sort this shit out. Toss in a potty mouthed female trucker love interest, and Barry has some adventures!
Johnstone's novels will never change the world, but if you are in the mood for some pulp action, with almost comically evil bad guys (and true, red blooded Americans as good guys), you could do a lot worse. Quick read with some surprises, expect lots of action, some misdirection and a wonky end. 3 pulpy stars!!