When the Nowhere Man is betrayed by his closest friend, the fallout is catastrophic.
A dense but concise prologue sets the table for Hurwitz’s 10th crackerjack Orphan X thriller. Fifteen years ago, Evan Smoak, “a throwaway child” trained as a ruthless killer via the top-secret Orphan Program, found an unexpected friend and something of a lifeline in Tommy Stojack, gunrunner and former Green Beret. Evan, once known as Orphan X, has left the program and is now the Nowhere Man, a freelance hunter who’s being hunted himself. Tommy’s complicity in multiple crimes, which violates Evan’s personal code, makes a fatal showdown inevitable but thankfully long in coming. As the narrative jumps between Evan and Tommy, Hurwitz’s snappy dialogue, propulsive prose, and larger-than-life characters consistently delight. In preparation for the culminating moment of truth are multiple episodes that introduce a rogue’s gallery of miscreants, some from previous installments. For the most part, the villains are accompanied by attendant backstories, keeping even new readers in the loop. Notable nasties include the duos Hick and Red and Janus and Sir Rubin and the hulking Delmont Hickenlooper Jr. Hurwitz’s Orphan X world is as sprawling and entertainingly populated as George Miller’s Mad Max universe. Series fans will especially welcome the return of Orphan handler Jack Johns, wily octogenarian Ida Rosenbaum, and mentor Joey Morales. As it turns out, The Last Orphan (2023) fortunately wasn’t. To quote the iconoclastic Evan, “What a mess intimacy was.”
The Orphan X world thrillingly expands with another wildly inventive episode.