The Big Bad by Brad Huestis

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MWSA Review

The Big Bad charges out of the starting gate introducing three of the main characters and hinting at the challenges they will face. Major Jess Gilbert’s inner dialogue reveals her reasons for choosing the field of law and her unlikely decision to join the Army. Her desires to deploy and make an impact beyond rear echelon work are realized when her three-star general boss informs her and her female mentor JAG officer colonel that they are soon to be leaving for Iraq.

Readers soon meet the villain, Colonel Mike “the Big Bad” Wolfe who is instantly easy to dislike. He’s arrogant, plays favorites, and bullies troops based on them not meeting his self-created standards. He, too, feels that he’s received a gift when he receives the orders to deploy his Brigade Combat Team to Iraq. Within weeks of training, Wolfe has fired his executive officer with a torrent of expletives and for no good reasons. The Big Bad clearly likes to flex his muscle in a show of force to intimidate his team into submission.

In a good versus evil story, Jess the JAG must investigate allegations against Wolfe once they are both in Iraq. She finds Wolfe’s men unusually dedicated to him and uncovers deep discrepancies in their stories, which elevates the case to a multiple-murder investigation. Jess juggles with the intricacies of military law, the warrior ethos, and the heartache of young enlisted men taking the blame while those who gave the orders escape the brunt of the law. While Wolfe is the quintessential villain, the Army’s justice system presents itself as an antagonistic force as well.

Author Brad Huestis penned a realistic and page-turning book revealing difficulties in applying the rule of law and inexact rules of engagement in asymmetric warfare. Highly recommended for thriller readers and those interested in what could happen behind the scenes in modern warfare.

Review by Valerie Ormond

 

Author's Synopsis

When Jessica Gilbert, a US Army JAG Corps major, deploys to Iraq in early 2006, she is excited to help rebuild the rule of law. But soon the disturbing allegation that an infamous Army colonel cut the ears from dead Iraqi fighters as bloody war trophies captures her focus. Her investigation quickly morphs into a murder inquiry when she uncovers gruesome photographs revealing that the fighters were brutally executed on the battlefield. In her quest to uncover the truth of what happened and why, she wrestles with the disparity in treatment of decision-makers versus trigger-pullers. Besides figuring out who committed this atrocity and their motives, she must fight to make sure everyone involved-from the top down-is held responsible.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Fiction—Mystery/Thriller/Crime
Pages/Word count: 240 / 66,679