Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: good, but not up to his previous works Review: Having read Deutermann in the past, i eagerly grabbed this book off the library shelf. i truly was on the edge of my seat for his other two books and for this one too, until the second and third times our hero and heroine were taken and/or taken in by the bad guy. pt, you are capable of better than this. i did enjoy it, though...
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Had me on the edge of my seat Review: I could not put it down! I found the characters enjoyable, and the plot refreshingly innovative, although there were a few places where the author stretched the believable a bit.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: Exciting Whodunit ! Review: I enjoy the writing style of Peter T. Dutermann. I like the way his plots play out. Always exciting and keeps readers like me on the edge of their seats during the entire book.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: Exciting Whodunit ! Review: I enjoy the writing style of Peter T. Dutermann. I like the way his plots play out. Always exciting and keeps readers like me on the edge of their seats during the entire book.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Deutermann gets it right Review: I read Sweepers in one sitting--this happens with maybe one in every twenty books I read. P. T. Deutermann gets it right this time as with his previous efforts.
Rating: ![3 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-3-0.gif) Summary: Sweepers sweeps along Review: P.T. Deutermann has been writing Naval books like this for a while now. His genre has wound up being a book-length version of the TV show JAG. That means (for those of you who haven't seen the show) a cross between Tom Clancy and John Grisham. The setting is more Clancy, the plot more Grisham.In this instance, a newly-promoted Admiral in the Navy is briefly a suspect in the murder of his ex-girlfriend. Her death was originally thought an accident, and only anomalies in the crime scene made the police suspicious. Because of the police suspicions, a female Commander in the Navy who's an investigator for JAG is assigned to liase with the police, and watch over the investigation to make sure that there aren't any scandals brewing (the book is set in the mid-90s, with Tailhook, Boorda's suicide, and various other scandals looming large in the rearview mirror). She's assigned a partner, a new civilian investigator from the Naval Investigative Service named "Train" von Rensel. They quickly ascertain that the villain of the piece is a Navy Seal that the Admiral abandoned one night in Viet Nam. The guy has been listed as MIA ever since, and apparently working for the CIA as a "sweeper", an assassin who kills other assassins who get out of line. I had some problems with the book. The plot seems to plod along for the first half of the book, or so. It's 400+ pages and feels as if a hundred could have been deleted without much pain. The two main characters, Train and the girl, are a bit dull and uninspired in their attempts to unravel the circumstances of the original incident in Viet Nam, and the plot there contains a twist that was more than a bit of a coincidence and not particularly believable to me. Also I too had problems with the portrayal of the main bad guy, the Seal. While I have no difficulty imagining one of these guys turning into a criminal, I do get impatient with them being portrayed as undefeatable. In this instance, he's that throughout the book until the very end, when someone finally manages to momentarily surprise him, once. He does all of the super secret Ninja stuff, walk through walls, pick locks without it being apparent he did so, kill people and make it look like an accident, etc. It's a bit much. Anyway, I still enjoyed the book at some level, and if you're into this sort of thing, I would recommend it.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Had me on the edge of my seat Review: Perhaps to someone better versed in navy language referring to a character as "the Admiral", when there are at least six Admirals in a story, would not be confusing. However, I could not tell who was who, much less why they were behaving in the way they were. What can I say except that the motives were muddy, the plot was moldy, the characters were transparent or opaque, the writing simplistic and the book overall just....boring.
Rating: ![2 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-2-0.gif) Summary: "Be all you can be", oops, darn, wrong military branch Review: Perhaps to someone better versed in navy language referring to a character as "the Admiral", when there are at least six Admirals in a story, would not be confusing. However, I could not tell who was who, much less why they were behaving in the way they were. What can I say except that the motives were muddy, the plot was moldy, the characters were transparent or opaque, the writing simplistic and the book overall just....boring.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Great book, interesting read Review: PT Deutermann did it again. Great characters and development. I really enjoyed his positive portrayal of the Dobermans in the book. Nice job! He got the dog's character down well. Protective, but never vicious. I'd have to recommend this book for any Doberman fan as well as people who enjoy a good action thriller.
Rating: ![1 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-1-0.gif) Summary: I can't believe I finished the book Review: Sweepers qualifies as one of the lighter style Tom Clancy techno-thrillers. I don't know about you, but when storys get too technical, I get bored. It takes too much mental effort to assimilate all the techno-babble, plus I get sick of the author trying impress me while the story line crams techspeak into my head. Lot's of people do like it though, and Clancy's success has created a groundswell of authors who love to get technical under the guise of fiction. Some authors are more story oriented than technical, and I like those books better than the Jane's version of fiction. Peter T. Duetermann, a retired Navy capitan, is one of those authors, and Sweepers is definitely one of those books; a strong plot and not so technical that it loses the story line. Sweepers starts strong and keeps moving right to the last page. Duetermann gives the book a good plot and a great ending, peppering it with Navy acronyms, but nothing an adult reader can't understand. Expect a lot of Navy chain-of-command stuff; it won't interfere with the story, but rather complements it because understanding Navy chain-of-command is an integral part of the plot. Sweepers has the traditional good guy going after the quintessential bad guy and a leading herione thrown in for good mix. The story isn't centered around steamy sex, porn or Kung-Fu fighting on every third page; in fact it has very little sex, one scene, and a limited amount of hand to hand combat. What Sweepers does have is suspense; and it builds from the first page in a Vietnam flashback to the last page with an ending that only the CIA will appreciate. Sweepers threads the story around both its characters and a very scary and believable plot. Read it, but don't start it on a week night. You won't put it down til you're done.
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