Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: Another Pandora's Clock Review: A friend of mine was reading this book and said, "Feel my hands!" The palms were damn from tension. The best part about this book is that the action begins on the very first page. The pilot's are great, the women are strong, Sir William is a perfect villian, Jay is wonderful. The ex-President is probably the weakest character but he is still very good. This is a great story if you like thrillers. It was every bit as good as Pandora's Clock and if you haven't read Pandora's Clock...what are you waiting for?
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: HEADWIND - Flying into an international suspense thriller Review: A man without a country - that's what a former United States President has become during an innocent trip to Europe. An international arrest warrant has been issued against former President John Harris for alleged crimes that he is said to have committed during his tenure in office. Peru claims President Harris ordered a CIA-backed attack of a biological weapons factory that resulted in the deaths and carnage of Peruvian lives. Under the same international treaty that foiled Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet into a long detainment in England, Peru wants the former U.S. President arrested and extradited to Peru to stand trial.The former President is on board a German commercial airline, en route to Rome, when he learns of his legal problems. Since most of the free world has signed the treaty, including the United States, it seems as though there is no place to run to. But the former President has friends in all the right places, including the cockpit, whose captain is a U.S. Air Force reservist who has strong feelings and loyalties about defending a U.S. President, active or otherwise. The hunt for a safe haven, while on board a jetliner, makes for a fast-paced and exciting drama that is irresistible to put down. The velocity quickens, and even the headwinds build, until the plane takes the former President to his final destination. This is a breakout novel of sorts for author John Nance as it has less to do about aviation, (as his fantastic previous airborne thrillers are), and more to do about the human, political and legal ironies of our times. There are a couple of courtroom dramas that bar none, as well as insightful forays into the decision processes of the Oval Office and 10 Downing Street, both of which give new meaning to the definition of leadership. This is pure adrenaline from takeoff to landing, and author John Nance at his very best.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Author of $oft Money says read this one Review: A one term President? Who is kidding who? Aside from reading a book where a politician walks away from politics, I really enjoyed this book. Nance has done a wonderful job selling the reader on ex President Harris, his character and his motives. The technical aspects of a Nance novel remain true to form and the plot moves along. As an action novel, it is light, but as a thriller, it is dead on. The sign of a good book is if you can not put it down, I found it hard to put this one down. If you like books based on political fiction, you will enjoy this book.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: High flying action Review: A top international lawyer is hired by the Peruvian president to arrest the former president-for tortures committed in Peru-when the plane arrives in Athens. The captain of the European carrier that is carrying the ex-president has different ideas and will do what ever is possible to keep this from happening. While flying all over Europe to evade this legitimate warrant for arrest, the reader is treated to some suspenseful reading and some interesting cat and mouse ploys. This is a fast paced action thriller with some political overtones. Most of the action and descriptions seem to come from a knowledgeable pilot/author, but I truly must question one glaring error I noticed in the book that a pilot would never make. Squawk 266.....9? A nine? In a squawk? Not likely Mr. Nance. Overall great entertainment.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: A chilling thriller Review: After giving a speech on world hunger, retired President John Harris flies from Istanbul to Rome with a stop in Athens. However, at the airport, the Greek police try to serve an international warrant filed by the head of Peru against the former President insisting he violated the Treaty Against Torture while in office by sanctioning CIA acts of violence against innocent people. Pilot Craig Dayton realizes the former President is in danger and makes a daring unauthorized take-off before the police arrest Harris. International lawyer, Sir William Stuart Campbell represents the Peruvian government in the World Court. William has a personal grudge against John and goes all out to nail the former world leader. The pilot, the president, and his attorney seek a nation that will provide a safe and fair hearing, not yet realizing the drama that will unfold when they select that country. As action thrillers go, John J. Nance typically writes some of the genre's best works. His setting of an airplane for his story line produces chills even for those readers who enjoy flying. For those who fear the air the background provides tremors. The characters including the President, are three dimensional and complex adding to the feel of a thriller. HEADWIND is top gun material and sure to place Mr. Nance on all the best-selling lists. Harriet Klausner
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: Not for those afraid of flying! Review: As always, the book moves at a very fast pace. Believable, too, that this could happen. He takes you off very quickly, then there were a couple of places where it bogged down. I re-read Blackout several times...couldn't put it down. Not quite the same with this book. For an "airplane mystery", I doubt you'd find a better writer.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Not Enough Fuel and Nowhere to Land Review: Captain Craig Dayton flies a 737 for a German airline and is on the ground in Greece ready to take off. John Harris, a former President of the United States is aboard the flight. When Harris was in office he supposedly ordered an attack on a biological weapons factory in Peru and all the workers were tortured to death. Now, because there is an international treaty against torture, Peru has issued an international arrest warrant for former President Harris and it's Interpol's duty to enforce it. Dayton doesn't have any intention of turning Harris over to the Greek authorities or anyone else. He takes matters into his own hands, backs the plane away from the gate and takes off on an unused runway without clearance. However he's a got a problem, he doesn't have enough fuel to get to the States and most places he can land in Europe will surrender Harris. Again John Nance has written an aviation thriller that will have you biting your nails as you rush though the book. Review submitted by Captain Katie Osborne
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: A nail-biter based on a dubious premise Review: Craig Dayton is the American pilot of a German 737 passenger jet. After boarding travelers in Athens for a flight to Rome, Craig is faced with the Greek police who want to arrest one of his First Class passengers, John Harris, a former President of the United States. Harris is wanted on an Interpol warrant initiated by the Peruvian government. Peru charges that Harris, in violation of an international treaty against torture, sanctioned atrocities that occurred during a CIA-sponsored raid on a Peruvian heroin factory during the Harris Administration. As a former U.S. Air Force pilot now in the reserves, Dayton's instinct to protect a former Commander-in-Chief takes over, and he backs his jet away from the gate, overturning a loaded baggage tram in the process, and vamooses out of Dodge, so to speak. Thus begins a chase across Europe, Harris in the 737 pursued by the Lear carrying Stuart Campbell, the international lawyer retained by Peru to bring the fugitive to bay. HEADWIND is an engrossing read if one accepts the shaky premise that an American pilot, sufficiently dedicated to guard the welfare of an ex-President, would also be enough of a cowboy to endanger his job, his crew, and the 118 paying passengers aboard his plane. To a certain degree, Dayton is a hero of the plot, though a bigger one is Jay Reinhart, a friend of the ex-President's and an expert in international law, whom Harris retains as his attorney. Jay, a former Texas District Judge, has recently been reinstated to the bar after having suffered a suspension for falling in love with a female defendant on trial in his court for murder. In any case, Jay now has to scramble from his Wyoming hideaway to Europe where the chase is on. Author John Nance does a swell job alternating the action between foreign courtrooms and the 737's flight deck, and there's sufficient tension, especially in the latter, for me to have gnawed away the edges of my expensive manicure. (Darn! Where's that emery board?) And all the while there's the question, "Is Harris really innocent of the charges?" After all, there's that pesky videotape. Although the ending is cloyingly happy as all loose ends are tidied up - a pet peeve of mine, HEADWIND is the perfect thriller for your next plane flight. If you're going roundtrip coast to coast, you'll finish before you touch down on the home leg. Check to see if any of our ex-Presidents are in First Class as you board, and yell "Hey, Bubba!" if you see Bill.
Rating: ![1 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-1-0.gif) Summary: Making little Headwind Review: Headwind - yet another aviation term for John J Nance to hang on to his latest thriller. A former American President is chased on a whirlwind hunt from country to country aboard a 737 commanded by a patriotic fellow countryman. The Peruvian government is seeking the President's arrest through Interpol in response to a botched CIA raid on a Peruvian drugs factory. Our President has a choice - face certain death from a kangaroo court in Lima or take his chances with the 737 crew and try to make it back to American (or American sympathising soil).... Being a Nance novel we knew that we could count on this latest offering to have a fast-flowing plot, strong dialogue and intriguing characters caught up in fantastically detailed aeronautical situations leading to a narrowly avoided disaster of apocolyptic proportions. Wrong. Headwind fails on almost all these counts. It seems that Nance has chosen to move away from the fly low, fast, furious formula that made previous thrillers such as Final Approach, Medusa's Child and Pandora's Clock an absolutely riveting read. The characters are weak and unconvincing. We get to learn little about so many of the potentially interesting characters that crop up throughout the book. Nance literally wastes the opportunity to develop our sympathy with the President or his followers. We find the premise of extradition to Lima weak, especially given the usual global scope of a Nance novel. We learn little about the 737's commander, apart from that he is willing to have his pilot's licence revoked over a questionable hunch over his former President's status as a wanted man. The flying sequences are short, undescriptive and very, very tame in comparison to those that had us on the edge of our seat in previous Nance outings. Much of the narrative is spent in courtrooms, on telephones, in briefing rooms.... This is not a Nance novel. We've come to expect spine-tingling aviation related thrillers. We want the good guys to win. We want the bad guys to buy the farm. We want 747-400's upside down in mid-air, with the good guys hanging on the tailfin. But Headwind is sadly little more a courtroom drama that gets bogged down in international legal red tape. By the end we don't care who wins, who gets extradited, who ends up in the dock or anything else. I was more worried about whether I'd left the iron on. Nance is a fantastic fiction writer. He needs to get out of the courtroom and back in the flight deck for his next outing. Leave the law to the professionals John. Write us books about planes!
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: John Nance At His Best Review: Headwind is impossible to put down after the first page. The suspense never lets up as the story unfolds quickly. Ex-president John Harris, his assistant, and a secret service agent are about to land in Athens Greece. The police are waiting for his 737 to land in order to arrest Harris for violating the Treaty Against Torture. Peru is claiming that a CIA operation resulted in the murder of hundreds of innocent civilians and was santioned by then President Harris. The pilot, Craig Dayton, is a U.S. Airforce reserve military who backs the plane out and takes off in a daring escape. The plane makes its way to Italy and on to Ireland before trying to get back to the United States. In the meantime while onboard, John Harris hires an old friend, Jay,an attorney who has been teaching international law in Laramie, Wyoming to represent him. The legal battle is finally fought in Ireland with a wonderful series of legal manuevers [...] Read the book for the rest of the story. The characters are well developed, the dialogue is believable, and the landings are incredibly suspenseful.
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