Orphan X

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Language
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“Brilliantly conceived and plotted … Read this book. You’ll thank me later.” -- David BaldacciWho is Orphan X? The Nowhere Man is a legendary figure spoken about only in whispers. It’s said that when he’s reached by the truly desperate and deserving, the Nowhere Man can and will do anything to protect and save them. But he’s not merely a legend. “Excellent…A smart, stylish, state-of-the-art thriller…might give Lee Child’s Jack Reacher books a run for their money.”—The Washington Post Evan Smoak is a man with skills, resources, and a personal mission to help those with nowhere else to turn. He’s also a man with a dangerous past. Chosen as a child, he was raised and trained as an Orphan, an off-the-books black box program designed to create the perfect deniable intelligence asset: An assassin. Evan was Orphan X—until he broke with the program and used everything he learned to disappear. But now someone is on his tail. Someone with similar skills and training who will exploit Evan’s secret new identity as the Nowhere Man to eliminate him.“Hurwitz melds nonstop action and high-tech gadgetry…in this excellent series opener.” Publishers Weekly (starred review)

More Details

Contributors
Brick, Scott narrator., nrt
ISBN
9781250067845
9781410486370
9781491551943
UPC
9781491551943

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Also in this Series

  • Orphan X (Evan Smoak thrillers Volume 1) Cover
  • The nowhere man (Evan Smoak thrillers Volume 2) Cover
  • Hellbent (Evan Smoak thrillers Volume 3) Cover
  • Out of the dark (Evan Smoak thrillers Volume 4) Cover
  • Into the fire (Evan Smoak thrillers Volume 5) Cover
  • Prodigal son: an Orphan X novel (Evan Smoak thrillers Volume 6) Cover
  • Dark horse (Evan Smoak thrillers Volume 7) Cover
  • The last orphan (Evan Smoak thrillers Volume 8) Cover
  • Lone wolf (Evan Smoak thrillers Volume 9) Cover
  • Nemesis (Evan Smoak thrillers Volume 10) Cover

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Similar Series From Novelist

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for series you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Evan Smoak is a trained assassin who helps the desperate; the Ghostman specializes in disappearing. Both men have unique skills that make them equally sought-after and dangerous. Plenty of technical detail and a whole lot of action keep the pages turning. -- Shauna Griffin
These violent action series star a former assassin (the dramatic Evan Smoak thrillers) and a former military policeman (the violent Jack Reacher thrillers) who are engaged in a personal war against injustice. Both offer the satisfaction of seeing wrongs righted. -- Mike Nilsson
Readers looking for sympathetic assassins who tangle with nefarious forces and uncover conspiracies as they fight crime will enjoy these cinematic, action-packed, and fast-paced thrillers. -- Andrienne Cruz
Each starring protagonists who pursue their own brand of vigilante justice, these thrillers are fast-paced and compelling. While the Evan Smoak series has more action and the Dexter Books more dark humor, both blur the line between good and evil. -- Mike Nilsson
These series have the appeal factors action-packed, cinematic, and fast-paced, and they have the genre "thrillers and suspense"; and the subjects "former assassins" and "assassins."
These series have the appeal factors action-packed, cinematic, and fast-paced, and they have the genre "thrillers and suspense"; and the subjects "former assassins," "smoak, evan (fictitious character)," and "assassins."
These series have the appeal factors action-packed, cinematic, and fast-paced, and they have the genre "thrillers and suspense."
These series have the appeal factors action-packed, cinematic, and fast-paced, and they have the genre "thrillers and suspense."
These series have the appeal factors action-packed, cinematic, and fast-paced, and they have the genre "thrillers and suspense"; and the subjects "secrecy in government" and "government conspiracies."

Similar Titles From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
These books have the subjects "secrecy in government," "former assassins," and "assassins."
These books have the appeal factors cinematic, action-packed, and fast-paced, and they have the genre "thrillers and suspense"; and the subjects "secrecy in government," "assassins," and "intelligence service."
NoveList recommends "Dexter books" for fans of "Evan Smoak thrillers". Check out the first book in the series.
The killing season - Cross, Mason
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These books have the appeal factors suspenseful, and they have the theme "on the run"; the genre "thrillers and suspense"; and the subjects "former assassins," "assassins," and "intelligence service."
These books have the appeal factors cinematic, action-packed, and fast-paced, and they have the genre "thrillers and suspense"; and the subjects "former assassins," "assassins," and "assassination."
These books have the appeal factors action-packed, suspenseful, and fast-paced, and they have the genre "thrillers and suspense"; and the subjects "former assassins," "assassins," and "intelligence service."
These books have the appeal factors cinematic, action-packed, and fast-paced, and they have the genre "thrillers and suspense"; and the subjects "secrecy in government," "assassins," and "intelligence service."
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Both Gregg Hurwitz and Harlan Coben write compelling, often violent, tales of suspense featuring innocent, everyman protagonists placed in nightmare situations from which they must extricate themselves and their families. A breakneck pace drives these tales of secrets and revenge. -- Joyce Saricks
Both Jeffrey Ashford and Gregg Hurwitz write suspense novels that place ordinary people in extraordinary circumstances, and wait for the fun to begin. But where Hurwitz's novels are action-packed and fast-paced, Ashford is more likely to address weighty moral issues. -- Shauna Griffin
April Smith and Gregg Andrew Hurwitz unspool fast-paced psychological suspense tales that keep their readers guessing until the very end. Action-packed and compelling, their intricate plots are both exciting and emotionally involving. Hurwitz's novels are notably more violent and gruesome than Smith's. -- Mike Nilsson
These authors' works have the subjects "former assassins," "secrecy in government," and "assassins."
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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

*Starred Review* At the age of 12, Evan is taken from his group home to join an under-the-radar government project called the Orphan Program. Handler Jack Johns trains him physically, mentally, and emotionally, molding him into a weapon for solo, offline covert operations, even helping him select a new last name, Smoak. As Orphan X, Evan is so successful that, along with Orphan O, he's considered the best of the best. But when his last hit is misrepresented, and he's told to take out a fellow Orphan, he quits. As a pro bono freelancer, now called Nowhere Man, with a pay-it-forward operation, he asks only that the last desperate person he helped give his number to one other person in similar need. Which works until Morena Aquilar needs him to stop an LAPD detective who's cultivating young sex slaves, and Evan later gets requests from two persons supposedly referred by Morena. In trying to determine which one to trust, he finds that he himself is the target. Knowing that this is the start of a series reduces tension only a sliver in this high-tech, nonstop thriller. Hurwitz, known for this kind of adrenaline-producing fiction (notably The Survivor, 2012), adds enough humanity to the action to make this a standout, and readers should get in at the start. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: As if a big print run and marketing plans weren't enough, screen rights have already been sold, with Hurwitz doing the screenplay and Bradley Cooper as producer and possible star.--Leber, Michele Copyright 2015 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

Bestseller Hurwitz (Don't Look Back) melds nonstop action and high-tech gadgetry with an acute character study in this excellent series opener. Evan Smoak, who was trained to be an assassin under the government's secret Orphan Program, is now a rogue operator known as the Nowhere Man with a mission to help those in need. As payment, each of his clients refers him to another innocent person in trouble. But Evan becomes the hunted when he tries to help Katrin White, whose father will be killed unless she pays gambling debts. A sense of authenticity permeates the story, no matter how outlandish the tech toys or over-the-top the action. Evan is an electrifying character who chooses daily to do good. Run-ins with his L.A. condo board add a bit of levity while a growing relationship with neighbor Mia Hall and her eight-year-old son, Peter, reinforce that a normal life is just out of Evan's reach. Movie rights were sold to Warner Bros. 100,000 first printing. Agent: Lisa Erbach Vance, Aaron Priest Literary Agency. (Jan.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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Kirkus Book Review

Kicking off a new series, Hurwitz (Don't Look Back, 2014, etc.) sets young Evan Smoak, a one-time government assassin, to work as a pro bono equalizerone call brings a criminal to justice. The 9/11 terror attacks made major bad guys targets for undercover termination, and so a darker-than-black government agency created the Orphan Program. That group trained throwaway kids as the world's most efficient assassins "for solo, offline covert operations." Then "drones changed everything," and the Orphans were left in limbo. Orphan X, Evan, decided to freelance, his impetus being his belief that his Orphan mentor (and substitute father), Jack Johns, was murdered. Soon, a Hezbollah arms chief, a dealer in fissile material, and a serial rapist receive Evan's justice. All it takes is a quick call to his victim's hotline, 1-855-2NOWHERE. Evan's back story arrives in short, scene-style chapters. The primary narrative follows Evan as he takes on new projects. His lair is a luxury Los Angeles condo, the atmosphere set by neighboring busybodies, where he has a secret vault with Google-level technology. Hurwitz offers a glimpse of Evan's modus operandi as the assassin eliminates a dirty cop coercing an immigrant teen into prostitution. Then the tale spins down into double crosses and duplicities as Evan becomes a target and other former Orphans enter the fray. High-tech gadgetry aboundsmicroscopic internal GPS transmitters, a "fully pixelated contact lens" for digital communicationbut Evan is old school too, mastering esoteric Filipino, Japanese, and Indonesian martial arts. Hurwitz closes with an unexpected narrative left turn, but even though he's painted Evan adequately, including vague hints of possible romance with neighbor Mia, a widowed single mother, Evan will need another adventure or two before he grows into an empathetic hero. With his digital-age The Avenger, Hurwitz races by minor plot holes and spins a web of relentless intrigue with bursts of tensely sketched violence. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

*Starred Review* At the age of 12, Evan is taken from his group home to join an under-the-radar government project called the Orphan Program. Handler Jack Johns trains him physically, mentally, and emotionally, molding him into a weapon for solo, offline covert operations, even helping him select a new last name, Smoak. As Orphan X, Evan is so successful that, along with Orphan O, he's considered the best of the best. But when his last hit is misrepresented, and he's told to take out a fellow Orphan, he quits. As a pro bono freelancer, now called Nowhere Man, with a pay-it-forward operation, he asks only that the last desperate person he helped give his number to one other person in similar need. Which works until Morena Aquilar needs him to stop an LAPD detective who's cultivating young sex slaves, and Evan later gets requests from two persons supposedly referred by Morena. In trying to determine which one to trust, he finds that he himself is the target. Knowing that this is the start of a series reduces tension only a sliver in this high-tech, nonstop thriller. Hurwitz, known for this kind of adrenaline-producing fiction (notably The Survivor, 2012), adds enough humanity to the action to make this a standout, and readers should get in at the start.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: As if a big print run and marketing plans weren't enough, screen rights have already been sold, with Hurwitz doing the screenplay and Bradley Cooper as producer and possible star. Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

Evan Smoak is the Nowhere Man, trained as an assassin in a shadowy black box orphan program (he was Orphan X) and now dedicated to helping those with nowhere else to turn. Unfortunately, someone aware of his past is trailing him. First in a new series from the New York Times best-selling author.

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Copyright 2015 Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Bestseller Hurwitz (Don't Look Back) melds nonstop action and high-tech gadgetry with an acute character study in this excellent series opener. Evan Smoak, who was trained to be an assassin under the government's secret Orphan Program, is now a rogue operator known as the Nowhere Man with a mission to help those in need. As payment, each of his clients refers him to another innocent person in trouble. But Evan becomes the hunted when he tries to help Katrin White, whose father will be killed unless she pays gambling debts. A sense of authenticity permeates the story, no matter how outlandish the tech toys or over-the-top the action. Evan is an electrifying character who chooses daily to do good. Run-ins with his L.A. condo board add a bit of levity while a growing relationship with neighbor Mia Hall and her eight-year-old son, Peter, reinforce that a normal life is just out of Evan's reach. Movie rights were sold to Warner Bros. 100,000 first printing. Agent: Lisa Erbach Vance, Aaron Priest Literary Agency. (Jan.)

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