Cover Image: In the Company of Killers

In the Company of Killers

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Member Reviews

I dnf'd this at twenty-four percent. I think I might have liked this premise better as a movie. The writing was confusing to me.

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There was far too much happening in this book. But at the same time, there was absolutely nothing happening. It seemed like we would make it farther only to be told that those events weren't relevant in the slightest.

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“In The Company of Killers” is an entertaining tale.

Exotic locales, bad guys exposed the higher you climb up the corporate ladder mixed with international intrigue… this book has it all.

Tom Klay is an investigated reporter who gets assignments that turn out to be not really for news but so his bosses can get control some criminal enterprise and the higher up the corporate rank Tom goes the more dangerous the story becomes.

All of this is told in a background of contemporary times with totally believable people, places and things. And, of course, the story proceeds at a break-neck pace.

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In the Company of Killers is a great thriller! I was definitely on the edge of my seat reading this.

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I was so excited to see that I got this book to read and the wait was well worth it! Such an exhilarating read!

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This book was written with the a great thriller pacing. I loved the African setting and the plot twists throughout. However I did struggle connecting with it at times throughout the story. I think I liked Bryan's writing style but would want to try a different story from him.

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This was just not the book for me. I thought it was going in one direction and instead it veered off in a completely different way. I would have preferred a lot more about animal issues. It started out so promising.

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Published by G.P. Putnam's Sons on April 13, 2021

Tom Klay investigates crimes against endangered species for an organization called The Sovereign. Similar in some ways to National Geographic, The Sovereign is a nonprofit institution that includes publications and a news channel focusing on nature and its threats. Among other stories, Klay investigates poachers in Kenya, where rhinos are killed for their horns. One of Klay’s sources is a friend who dies early in the novel. Klay suspects that Ras Botha, a former South African cop, is behind a poaching operation that is responsible for his friend’s death.

One of The Sovereign’s apparent supporters is Krieger, who owns Perseus Group, a security company that provides international paramilitary support to governments and private organizations. Klay doubts that Krieger cares much about endangered species, given his conflicting interest in a Chinese plan to run a railroad down the middle of Kenya. Part of the story’s drama involves the sale of The Sovereign to the media branch of the Perseus Group, much to the chagrin of The Sovereign’s president and Klay’s editor, Vance Eady. The sale may drastically change the nature of Klay’s job.

Klay’s backstory as the son of an imprisoned undertaker includes a failed relationship with a South African prosecutor named Hungry Khoza. It also includes a drunk driving accident that caused a child’s death in Jakarta and destroyed his relationship with Erin Dougherty. At a low point, thinking of himself as “a bad person who does good things to hide the truth,” Klay agreed to work under contract for the CIA.

The plot extends well beyond poaching and the ivory trade. Following the plot requires a bit of concentration and a keen memory. Scenes flash by that the reader will later need to connect with new events. People Klay trusts turn out to be untrustworthy. People Klay despises may actually be his allies. The CIA is up to its usual meddlesome tricks, sometimes forming relationships with the wrong people. Unsavory characters of note include a pedophile priest, an Admiral who betrays the American military, and someone who shoots a child to save himself from a charging buffalo.

The least satisfying part of the story concerns the area in the South China Sea that both China and the Philippines claim as their territory. Krieger makes a sales pitch to give China a technological advantage against the American Navy, which regularly cruises international waters to prevent Chinese aggression in the South China Sea. The Chinese intrigue seems out of place. It advances into territory that is too familiar to thriller readers. The novel works best when it avoids conventional thriller plots and concentrates on the kind of story that other thriller writers haven't told.

Bryan Christy uses elephants as a metaphor for power and delayed vengeance (elephants, after all, never forget). The story’s African setting allows Christy to create an atmosphere that sets In the Company of Killers Apart from its competition. Klay isn’t an action hero, making him more credible than most thriller protagonists. The story nevertheless moves with deliberate speed, never bogging down despite its complexity. Christy’s prose is smooth and he doesn’t waste words.

Life changes people. Good fiction reflects that with changes in characters. Klay evolves as the story progresses. He becomes more likeable as he gains more insight into his past. If Christy is inclined to use In the Company of Killers as a springboard for a series — and why wouldn’t be? — it will likely be a series worth following.

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Tom Klay`s world does not just revolve around being a wildlife reporter. His job also makes him the perfect agent for the CIA to infiltrate such regions that his profession can only see. He reports a little information to them in exchange for the agency to help him. But he was selective on cases that he reports, maybe because he knows his capabilities, and infiltrating big information means risking his life as well. He stays discrete and just focuses on his real profession. It all changes when he was in Kenya investigating elephant poaching. Klay and his friend Bernard were attacked. Klay barely survived but his friend got murdered. CIA had known this and gave Klay an option to capture the man who is behind all these acts. He accepted it for Klay wants nothing but revenge for whoever did this to his friend. A man too big for him to handle Ras Botha. He was tasked to work under the woman he once loved a South African Prosecutor. But as soon as he digs in he had seen that they are part of a much larger picture, a game that they do not know who is the main player and them being just a pawn. He had a glimpse of the lethal game he did not know and now questions who is more dangerous, is it the animals he investigates or Man is the most dangerous animal of all. A game of espionage.
It was a fun journey! I meant for me, not for Tom. He had it rough but he perseveres to get where he is now. It took a life to just realize what is his real call and trusting the system to do its job is not enough. You have to fight your way. I did enjoy the story and the mysteries behind it. The thought of everything you knew is not what it seemed to be. That is the thing that really had me liking this book. A book that will get readers who love mysteries excited. Definitely a recommendable book!

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Amazing story. Well developed characters that are in a twisted engrossing thriller. Highly recommended. Super suspense that comes to a satisfying end! Highly recommended . A true roller coaster thrill ride

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