The Henchmen's Book Club

Book Review of Danny King’s The Henchmen’s Book Club

I grabbed Danny King‘s novel, The Henchmen’s Book Club off of the KDP list.

Description from Goodreads:
Mark Jones is a henchman for hire. He guards bunkers, patrols perimeters and stands around in a boiler suit waiting to get knocked out by Ninjas. This is his job.

In his time he’s worked for some of the most notorious super villains the world has ever known – Doctor Thalassocrat, Victor Soliman, Polonius Crump; Mark was with each of them when they met their makers at the hands of British Secret Service super-spy, Jack Tempest and lived to tell the tale – if not pay the bills.

Still for every hour under gunfire there are weeks if not months of sitting around on monorails so Jones starts a book club with his fellow henchmen to help pass the time.

It was only meant to be a bit of fun.

It was never meant to save the world.

Review:
Ok, that was some funny shit right there. This was the first Danny King book I’d ever read, but I’m 100% sure it won’t be the last. I think I laughed the whole way through. It even improved my mood after having a spat with my other half. It takes a lot to do that, but The Henchmen’s Book Club was up to the task.
Mark Jones is an Affiliate, a henchman for hire, and a good one at that. He’s managed to survive far longer than many in an undeniably deadly job. It seems every Goldfinger wannabe has a few piranha tanks or hungry alligators about. He’s also a man after my own heart, a dedicated bibliophile. He likes to read and, surprisingly, finds a number of other henchmen do too. Thus is born The Book Club. They read good books. I had to look more than one of the titles up in order to get the reference. I did occasionally wonder where all the books came from, but really didn’t find that a point worth too much worry.

The American and British special agents are pure amusement. Though I am just a tad ashamed to come from the same homeland as Rip Dunbar. What a tool! I love that their personalities are so very different, but still falling within the same character archetype.

I highly recommend picking this one up. There are a few missing words here and there. King even acknowledges that in the afterward. I didn’t find it particularly distracting though. Definitely not enough to change my opinion of the book.

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