Zero Sum Audiobook By Barry Eisler cover art

Zero Sum

A John Rain Novel

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Zero Sum

By: Barry Eisler
Narrated by: Barry Eisler
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Buy for $19.32

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Returning to Tokyo in 1982 after a decade of mercenary work in the Philippines, a young John Rain learns that the killing business is now controlled by Victor, a half-Russian, half-Japanese sociopath who has ruthlessly eliminated all potential challengers. Victor gives Rain a choice: kill a government minister or die a grisly death. But the best route to the minister is through his gorgeous Italian wife, Maria, a route that puts Rain on a collision course not only with Victor but with the shadowy forces behind the Russian's rise to dominance - and the longings of Rain's own conflicted heart.

It's a battle between kingpin and newcomer, master and apprentice, a zero-sum contest that can only end with one man dead and the other the world's foremost assassin.

©2017 Barry Eisler (P)2017 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved.
Thriller & Suspense Espionage Crime Thrillers Suspense Thriller Russia Spies & Politics Crime Fiction Heartfelt
Excellent Fight Scenes • Authentic Atmosphere • Excellent Narration • Complex Protagonist • Nuanced Relationships

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Great book, and the author (who is also the narrator) does a great job most of the time. My only complaint is that the Italian character sounds like The Count from Sesame Street. First real narration complaint in the whole series though

Barry, please never do an Italian accent again

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I have not read that many John Rain books, but I always like to know where things got started. This is a good one for background. Eisler gives enough history, without boring the reader, and writes a very good story at that.
Another thing I love, is the fact that the book is written in 80's. I always think that spies and crooks alike had to be a lot clever before all the technology we are overwhelmed with today, while at the same time they had more opportunities to get away with stuff.
I loved the story as well as the performance and I hope to read, or listen to, many more

When the Rain began

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Would you consider the audio edition of Zero Sum to be better than the print version?

I am blind. I have no idea. But I love Barry Eisler's narration

Who was your favorite character and why?

John Rain has become my favorite character of well, maybe always. I am not sure. It was odd for me as this book goes back to when he and Tot's were together. That was poignant.
I wish you could keep John Rain books coming for the rest of my life. I know Barry Eisner has other stories in him but I just have such an attachment to Rain.

Which scene was your favorite?

I find questions like this pointlessa

Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?

All of it

John Rain, I just can't help loving him

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Listening to Zero Sum just after completing Brad Thor's newest novel in his Scot Harvath series may have affected my rating of this John Rain novel. Although Zero Sum is Book 9 in Barry Eisler's John Rain series, it is the first in the series chronologically; it goes back to 1982 when Rain was around 30 years old. He grew up in both Japan and the US and is very fluent in both languages. Rain dropped out of high school at age 17 to join the US Army and he served in Vietnam. After that he joined the CIA briefly and then moved on to become a contract killer is Japan until he made a major error and was forced to leave the country. He moved to the Philippines for almost a decade before he became persona non grata there so he moved back to Japan in 1982 hoping he would be welcome there. That is the point that this novel starts.

I am a longtime fan of author Barry Eisler and his John Rain series. I rate most of his novels 5 star. Eisler along with his long time friend JA (Joe) Konrath are two of few well established authors with major publishing houses who moved early on to self publishing and they deserves substantial credit along with Amazon and others for bringing down the price of books. He also republished all of first six John Rain novels with new titles and with Eisler himself narrating. I've been very critical of such authors such as Lee Child and Brad Thor for republishing some of their audio novels when I already had copies of the original publication. That criticism does not apply to Barry Eisler although I already owned the original publication of his first six John Rain novels because the narration was much improved and the new versions were inexpensive. Zero Sum for example cost me only $1.99 rather than a full credit.

Eisler has been experimenting with other types of novels for several years. I am very pleased with him returning to his John Rain series. Zero Sum is an excellent addition to the John Rain series, but in my opinion it does not quite deserve 5 star rating for the story itself. Eisler demonstrates again that he is an outstanding narrator. Narration is so good that it brings the overall rating up to 5 stars.

I recommend all novels in the John Rain series because all are worthwhile and because Barry Eisler more than any other established author deserves credit for speeding the acceptance of self publishing.

Excellent John Rain suspense thriller!

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A return to early years when John Rain had yet to perfect his assasin skills to the point of making them appear to be accidents. in Tokyo he faces a multi leveled criminal/political situation including psycho Russian strong men, Japanese politics and US CIA.

Young Rain in transition

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