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SPLICE by Bill McCormick

SPLICE

Hit Bit Technology

by Bill McCormick

Pub Date: July 21st, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-952880-00-1
Publisher: Azoth Khem Publishing

McCormick offers a blood-soaked tale of upward mobility.

At the gory heart of this work is the mastermind known as Splice, whose criminal father and drug-addicted mother dump him on the side of an Iowa road as a teenager with nothing but a $50 bill. The precocious teen soon gets a library card, which enables him to learn new skills, including computer proficiency and pickpocketing. These abilities allow him to make a dishonest living, first in Omaha, then Chicago and New York City. But his life changes when he’s caught hacking into an ATM owned by an old man who’s high up in a major crime organization. Fortunately, the man takes a liking to him and even gives the boy, unnamed to this point, a new identity: Robert. The teen becomes the man’s constant companion but then decides to join the Marines, hoping to be able to access a military supercomputer. Robert befriends a mentally ill Marine named Catherine “Cat” Honig,and, in time, they form a secret commando squad that handles missions for a criminal syndicate. Despite painful missteps along the way, he accomplishes a high-tech dream and renames himself Splice. In this volume, McCormick ably creates likable action heroes out of people who don’t fit into society. Robert/Splice uses his intellect throughout in order to flourish, and his appealing ability to correctly predict people’s behavior allows him to survive his occasional lapses in judgment—even if what happens to him seems rather unlikely. Overall, readers will want him and Cat to come out on top after the setbacks that fate has handed them. Indeed, one finds it easier to appreciate the criminals’ motivations than those of the supposed forces of good, whom McCormick portrays as elected and military officials who are more concerned with appearances than with doing the right thing.

An engaging dark comedy rife with retribution.