Created, The Destroyer (The Destroyer, Volume 1)
Registered by GoryDetails of Nashua, New Hampshire USA on 12/14/2017
This Book is Currently in the Wild!
1 journaler for this copy...
I found this slightly-battered reprint at a local Goodwill thrift shop, and nabbed it for another release copy.
This is the first in the long-running fantasy/action series "The Destroyer," a series full of mind-bending violence and side-splitting hilarity - if you like this sort of thing! The premise: one Remo Williams, cop, is appropriated by a secret government agency (the best kind); his death is faked so no one will look for him, and he is sent to be trained as a top-notch assassin, to be used by the President's order only. His trainer is a wizened little Korean man named Chiun, last living master of Sinanju, "the sun source of all martial arts"... and Chiun, fussy curmudgeon that he is, makes the series. [I hope he's still around; I haven't really followed the series past book #60 or so, and they're well into the 100's now!] Since this is the "origin" book, it takes a while for the pieces to come together; we don't even meet Chiun until a third of the way through - but it sets the pattern for what follows. There will be some hideous criminal conspiracy, usually involving bloody massacres; Remo will be summoned; he will, reluctantly, turn up, though sometimes he has to be coerced; he and Chiun will commit reverse mayhem, Remo will fail to listen to Chiun and get in trouble, Chiun will rescue him and never let him forget it, more mayhem ensues, and the bad guys either perish in gasping, bloody heaps, or retreat to fight another day. [The film version of this - "Remo Williams: the Adventure Begins," with Fred Ward as a respectable Remo and Joel Grey as a marvelous Chiun - was pretty entertaining, although it didn't include some of Remo's bloodier stunts. This is the flick with the chase scene on the scaffolded Statue of Liberty.]
Note: This is the 16th reissue edition, with a foreword by Chiun himself, in which - among other rants - he points out that the book's real title should be "Chiun Meets Pale Piece of Pig's Ear" [for the uninitiated, that's what he calls Remo]. He finishes his foreword with: "When you are done with what I say, THROW THIS BOOK AWAY. It will do you no good. With moderate tolerance for you, I am forever, Chiun, Master of Sinanju."
So I guess I'll "throw" the book away now; it's always wise to do what Chiun says!
[There's a TV Tropes page on the series, with some entertaining tidbits.]
This is the first in the long-running fantasy/action series "The Destroyer," a series full of mind-bending violence and side-splitting hilarity - if you like this sort of thing! The premise: one Remo Williams, cop, is appropriated by a secret government agency (the best kind); his death is faked so no one will look for him, and he is sent to be trained as a top-notch assassin, to be used by the President's order only. His trainer is a wizened little Korean man named Chiun, last living master of Sinanju, "the sun source of all martial arts"... and Chiun, fussy curmudgeon that he is, makes the series. [I hope he's still around; I haven't really followed the series past book #60 or so, and they're well into the 100's now!] Since this is the "origin" book, it takes a while for the pieces to come together; we don't even meet Chiun until a third of the way through - but it sets the pattern for what follows. There will be some hideous criminal conspiracy, usually involving bloody massacres; Remo will be summoned; he will, reluctantly, turn up, though sometimes he has to be coerced; he and Chiun will commit reverse mayhem, Remo will fail to listen to Chiun and get in trouble, Chiun will rescue him and never let him forget it, more mayhem ensues, and the bad guys either perish in gasping, bloody heaps, or retreat to fight another day. [The film version of this - "Remo Williams: the Adventure Begins," with Fred Ward as a respectable Remo and Joel Grey as a marvelous Chiun - was pretty entertaining, although it didn't include some of Remo's bloodier stunts. This is the flick with the chase scene on the scaffolded Statue of Liberty.]
Note: This is the 16th reissue edition, with a foreword by Chiun himself, in which - among other rants - he points out that the book's real title should be "Chiun Meets Pale Piece of Pig's Ear" [for the uninitiated, that's what he calls Remo]. He finishes his foreword with: "When you are done with what I say, THROW THIS BOOK AWAY. It will do you no good. With moderate tolerance for you, I am forever, Chiun, Master of Sinanju."
So I guess I'll "throw" the book away now; it's always wise to do what Chiun says!
[There's a TV Tropes page on the series, with some entertaining tidbits.]
Journal Entry 2 by GoryDetails at Rest Area on I495 in Chelmsford, Massachusetts USA on Wednesday, December 20, 2017
Released 6 yrs ago (12/20/2017 UTC) at Rest Area on I495 in Chelmsford, Massachusetts USA
WILD RELEASE NOTES:
I left this book on a pay-phone (increasingly rare!) at the northbound rest stop; hope the finder enjoys it!
[See other recent releases in MA here.]
*** Released for the 2017 What's in a Name release challenge, for the embedded "Roy" in the title. ***
*** Released for the 2017 D for December release challenge. ***
*** Released for the 2017 Movie release challenge. ***
[See other recent releases in MA here.]
*** Released for the 2017 What's in a Name release challenge, for the embedded "Roy" in the title. ***
*** Released for the 2017 D for December release challenge. ***
*** Released for the 2017 Movie release challenge. ***