Summary: Hostage Run is the 2nd book in the Mindwar series by Andrew Klavan.
Starting with the POV of Molly, Rick’s girlfriend. Molly gets kidnapped by Kurodar’s goons and is held hostage in an old barn. Kurodar wants to use Molly to get Rick to give up his fight in the Realm and stay out of it. So Rick is torn between saving Molly with his compliance, or stopping Kurodar’s reign of terror and going into the realm instead. He decides that he will go into the Realm and fight, but he’s not leaving Molly alone. He’s sending Victor One to rescue her. While Rick is in the Realm, he discovers that Kurodar has a new invention: the Breach, a real, physical link between the Realm and real life. With the Breach, Kurodar can control things in real life with simply a thought. And there’s another one of his inventions that Rick has to get past. There’s a ginormous spaceship with a giant Octo-Guardian that protects it. Don’t ask me what the Octo-Guardian is, you’ll find out in worldviews. Keep scrolling. Anyways, this ship is going to be used to unleash a brutal attack on the real world, and Rick has to destroy it before Kurodar can use it. And did I mention that Rick still has to destroy the Golden City, or the battery and heart of the Realm, before the actual Realm can actually disintegrate? But that’s all going to be a piece of cake for Rick of course. Or will it? And will Molly be rescued successfully? I don’t know……just kidding. You’ll have to find out.
Worldviews: I’ll just say that I don’t actually know whether Klavan is a Christian author, (look at my last review for more details) but I have found some Christian morals and worldview in this book. There are some Christian professing characters who pray sometimes and ask God for help, and also a character that professed to be raised as a Christian but then turned his back on his God, and decides he’ll escape His wrath by living forever in the Realm as a giant octopus. Which is an extremely stupid strategy by the way. It even looks stupid as I type it out. Kurodar wants to be a ‘god’, but anybody with half a brain knows that’s not going to ever happen. Kurodar’s dad was also a high ranking officer in the Soviet Union’s secret police, and we all know how anti-Christian that is. I think that Klavan was just inserting that to illustrate Kurodar’s messed-up background.
Foul Language: No bad words. There was a mention of a character “As a devout Christian, there were certain words that ___ didn’t like to use out loud. But let’s face it: he was thinking them.” No specific words were mentioned, but I guess they were just alluded to.
Violence: Most of the violence comes from Rick’s escapades in the Realm, so technically they aren’t ‘real’, but there is good description. I’ll also note again some more terrorist actions from Kurodar, like hijacking multiple planes and vehicles, kidnapping people, etc.
Romance: Rick’s girlfriend Molly was kidnapped (hence the title of the book) and of course Rick has to be a knight in shining armour and go rescue her. Or, at least, at first somebody else was sent to rescue her, and then Rick finished the job. Rick is also torn between Molly and a character named Mariel that he had met in the Realm (a very interesting twist on that later). You’ll have to see how that plays out.
Rating and recommended age level: I’m rating this 4 stars! I really liked it! It had a great plot and ideas, and I like Klavan’s suspenseful writing style. I also liked the concept of sacrifice that Klavan incorporated, I think that was good.
I’m going to put the age level at 11-12+, again, because the story line definitely has a lot of plot line and depth/complication to it that would be easier for 11-12 year olds to follow, and probably with the amount of action and violence, it would be better for that age range content wise. Overall, I enjoyed Hostage Run throughly.