UUUUUUUUGGGGGGGHHHHHH.
I am so tired of the socially unaware gaffes that Nick Pirog continues to make in this series: referring to a group of lesbians as "lesbos", calling one of his African characters "Timon" and the UNCEASING sexist need to come up with different euphemisms for women's breasts. Also please, sir, DO NOT ATTEMPT EROTICA EVER AGAIN.
If there's one thing everyone can agree on: Thomas Prescott is a controversial character.
I kept getting tripped up by Pirog's bulls**t choice of words and almost gave up on the book, but kept slogging through and then realized wow, this is actually a really good story (if lacking some of the humor that is Prescott's saving grace).
The plot has more depth and weight than the first two books in the series. Somehow Pirog took an article about pirates attacking a cruise ship and statistics about the current AIDs situation in South Africa and mashed them into a somewhat plausible, rather Jason Bourne-esque, international intrigue with high-profile politics, billions of dollars, redemption, and even a little romance. And he is definitely king of the plot-twist. There's some details that require a suspension of belief but if you just squint a little, you can pretend this is a James Bond book.
It's a shame Pirog still writes about women and other groups like he's stuck in 1995. That's a huge flaw that I see constantly in the comments that drives people away from these stories. It's a shame because Pirog has real talent. I just wish he'd bring Thomas Prescott into the 21st century just...a...little...bit...more. Would I make Prescott completely politically correct? No, his lack of giving a rat's ass about what people think of him or what he thinks of them is part of his charm. BUT, it's not just Prescott that "talks/thinks" like this...the sexism, passive racism, agism, body shaming, and stereotyping leaks into other characters which makes it clear it is really Pirog himself that is the problem and I don't think it will change. He's made a niche with this series, why would he change the formula now?
I downloaded four Prescott stories as a free bundle from Amazon and I'll listen to the fourth story, still with the hope that there will be some maturity in how Pirog describes his characters. He's grown a lot from "Unforeseen"in plot development, but character development and delivery still feel jarringly out of place and time.
As for the narrator of the audiobook. Johnny Heller is great...he has a Luke Evans raspy voice and he has grown in his narration of these stories (the first book was delivered way too fast, with a film-noir flavor that made Prescott seem like he was a 60 year old retired homicide detective rather than 30 years old.) That said, Heller may have cringed when he realized he'd have to do a myriad of international accents. He gives it a good shot, but it was a challenge to stay in the story when I was fixated on some of the cringe-worthy voiceovers.