
The Gray Man
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Narrado por:
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Jay Snyder
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De:
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Mark Greaney
Now a Netflix film starring Ryan Gosling, Chris Evans, and Ana de Armas
The first Gray Man novel from number one New York Times best-selling author Mark Greaney.
To those who lurk in the shadows, he’s known as the Gray Man. He is a legend in the covert realm, moving silently from job to job, accomplishing the impossible and then fading away. And he always hits his target. Always.
But there are forces more lethal than Gentry in the world. Forces like money. And power. And there are men who hold these as the only currency worth fighting for. In their eyes, Gentry has just outlived his usefulness.
But Court Gentry is going to prove that, for him, there’s no gray area between killing for a living and killing to stay alive....
Get ready for white-knuckled listening. Greaney's debut novel introduces the enigmatic and elusive Court Gentry, a former CIA operative and a legendary hired gun. With a terrifying ability to vaporize targets and a strict moral code, he stalks the gray margins of the world, moving silently from job to job, accomplishing the impossible, then fading away. When his government and former employers turn on him, there is no safehouse to run to, no way to lie low. In a constant state of escape and pursuit, Gentry tears through the Middle East and Europe in a riveting life-or-death race against time.
©2009 Mark Greaney (P)2010 Audible, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...




















Reseñas de la Crítica
"Through the carnage, Gentry remains an intriguing protagonist with his own moral code. Comparisons will be made to Jason Bourne, but the Gray Man is his own character. The ending screams for a sequel, but it will be difficult to maintain the intensity level of this impressive debut." (Booklist)
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Move Over Jack Reacher
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Would you try another book from Mark Greaney and/or Jay Snyder?
Greaney: Possibly. Im 50/50 after this one.Snyder: i LOVE his work with the Exs series by Peter Clines. So yes.
Would you recommend The Gray Man to your friends? Why or why not?
If they want something fast paced but shallow then yes.What three words best describe Jay Snyder’s voice?
Inspiring,Could you see The Gray Man being made into a movie or a TV series? Who should the stars be?
Absolutely. Not sure. The characters were poorly fleshed out. The descriptions literally came down to things like beard, bald, german, ponytail, skinny and the like.Any additional comments?
I enjoyed it but i have two major complaints. 1 Snyder's accents are TERRIBLE. i love his work but a big part of this book is multinational characters. For instance the african accents were laughable.... the arab ones were laughable. just bad. 2 The lack of detail or explanations ESPECIALLY during the action. It was hard to tell what was going on because the scene was poorly set up and or poorly explained during. Just a lot of "he kicked, he punched... he ran through the door"... what door??Intense just poorly detailed and poor accents.
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Violent!
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A Happy Surprise
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Really?
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Snyder delivers as narrator.
Action on steroids!
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I bought this novel several years ago, and it's been sitting in my 'to be listened to' pile for ages. I recently read the first two of Gregg Hurwitz's *Evan Smoak* series - Orphan X and The Nowhere Man - and absolutely loved them! A friend told me *The Gray Man* series was similar, so I listened to the first one yesterday, after having picked up #3 and #4 in Audible's recent 2-for-1 sale. I listened almost in one sitting, going about my daily life on automatic pilot with headphones plugged in.
I love the 'assassin with a conscience' trope and Greaney carries that off really well with Court Gentry. For me, Court began as a flat, two-dimensional character, but he developed depth and interest as the book progressed, enough so that I was willing to pop out the extra credit for Book #2 (which may well have been Audible's evil plan by not offering it in their sale - MWAHAHAHA!), and I plan to listen to #s 2, 3, and 4 at my earliest opportunity. The book wasn't perfect - there were about half a dozen moments that were so over-the-top I literally had to stop listening long enough to roll my eyes (and curb my 'yeah, riiiiight' reaction) - but the story held my interest enough so I was able to return from those breaks and dive back in.
My one complaint is a bit spoiler-ish, so stop here if you'd rather not read a spoiler.
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I must have a sadistic side to my personality. One of the most common irritants to me while reading an amazing action/adventure book is the lack of a climactic, satisfying finish for the 'bad guy.' Inevitably, book after book will create these contemptible, horrible antagonists who will torture or kill others at will. The book will build and build upon the theme of retribution, with the good guy (in this case, literally) threatening a slow, painful death for the antagonist if he doesn't release his hostages / give up the MacGuffin / become a nice guy, etc. Then at the climax, the bad guy is killed off with one or two gunshots in one short paragraph or less, never even realizing he's been defeated. Again, I must be a sadist, because that ANNOYS the spit out of me. I do NOT want to read or listen to page after page of brutal torture - seriously, I am not *that* much a sadist. I do, however, want at least the realization of pending defeat to enter the bad guy's mind.
I don't mean to steer this review away from Greaney, but I have to say that, in this regard, at least, Gregg Hurwitz's 'Evan Smoak' novels ABSOLUTELY deliver a 100% more satisfactory ending, the second Smoak novel especially so. Additionally, I found the character of Evan Smoak to be almost immediately relatable and multi-faceted, almost immediately 'real' to me. It took almost half the novel for me to feel the same about Court Gentry.
Bottom line: the first *Gray Man* novel shows a lot of potential, enough so that I'm willing to give the other books in the series a try. At this point, though, it can go either way for me, largely depending on whether Court Gentry develops as a 'real-to-me' character.
Promising Beginning, BUT ...
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…one of the best in action thriller genre!
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Fast paced and engaging
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What made the experience of listening to The Gray Man the most enjoyable?
What the Gray Man made it through was all just a little too fantastical. I had to stop with this book. This guy ranks up next to the Six-Million Dollar Man, only meaner.Really?
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